Do they remember
months after the solstice? Who
will speak
for you tomorrow morning
before strange fog
clears? Tonight this parade
answers no questions.
Do they remember
months after the solstice? Who
will speak
for you tomorrow morning
before strange fog
clears? Tonight this parade
answers no questions.
A V of black
birds moves across
the sky, the bus
is late again. Her stomach
aches from testing
all those body mist
testers—one scent
is too much
for her. Any bird alone
must be lost
she thinks. When she wants
to hide, she goes
to sleep. Figments find her
face up ready
to receive an aroma
therapy of dreams.
“There’s the present moment fraught with tangled woods.”
—Jack Kerouac, from Big Sur
The doctor who’s not really
a doctor
yet asks her to find her
safe place with eyes closed, to lie
on her back, see
nothing but that brown orange
noise of inner eye
lids till it comes
into focus—the edge
of a field blurred into a pine forest so ripe
with needle
bed mint sweetness.
All kisses before it got so complicated
and the sun peeking through just
to wave hello
and see you later when you get up
from your daydream—
I mean hers.
It was her death to be
so awake before all of you without
a cleared path
to escape along. It is about
feet first, it turns out.