Time Will Clean the Carcass Bones

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Time Will Clean the Carcass Bones Page 10

by Lucia Perillo

eyeballing the spawning from this cedar bridge.

  As if they’re sure we will be cohorts

  in the rapture about which the bumper stickers speak,

  as if we really will ascend someday to swim among the fishes.

  All of us: see how good we are,

  so careful not to kick stones down into the creek.

  I’m just trying to get a handle on how it would be

  if we made love one time in our lives

  (after days spent on the interstate)

  before we lay down to die so publicly in shallow pools?

  While the other forms pass by and point

  to educate their frenzied children:

  See the odd species. They chose love.

  from

  Inseminating the Elephant

  (2009)

  Any idiot can face a crisis; it is this day-to-day living that wears

  you out.

  CHEKHOV

  Virtue Is the Best Helmet

  One of these days I’m going to get myself an avatar

  so I can ride an archaeopteryx in cyberspace —

  goodbye, the meat cage.

  Pray the server doesn’t crash, pray

  against the curse of carpal tunnel syndrome.

  But then my friend the lactation consultant

  brings up the quadriplegic who gave birth

  (two times no less)

  (motorcycle wreck)

  just to make her body do

  one thing the meat could still remember.

  Somebody has to position the babies

  to sip the breastmilk rivulets.

  And the cells exude

  despite their slumber. One minute

  too much silence, the next there’s so much screaming.

  Turns out Madagascar’s giant cockroach

  makes a good addition to a robot

  because the living brain adds up to more than: motor,

  tracking ball, and the binary numeric code.

  Usually the cockroach flees from light,

  but sometimes it stands in its little coach unmoving,

  stymied by the dumb fact of air.

  And sometimes it rams into a wall

  to force reality to show its hand.

  Found Object

  Somebody left this white T-shirt

  like a hangman’s hood on the new parking meter —

  the magic marks upon its back say: I QUIT METH 4-EVER.

  A declaration to the sky, whose angels all wear seagull wings

  swooping over this street with its torn scratch tickets

  and Big Gulp cups dropped by the curb.

  Extra large, it has been customized

  with a pocketknife or a canine tooth

  to rough the armholes where my boobs now wobble

  as I roam these rooms lit by twilight’s bulb,

  feeling half like Bette Davis in a wheelchair

  and half like that Hell’s Angels kingpin with the tracheotomy.

  Dear reader, do you know that guy?

  I didn’t think so. If only we could all watch the same TV.

  But no doubt you have seen the gulls flying,

  and also the sinister bulked-up crows

  carrying white clouds of hotdog buns in their beaks:

  you can promise them you’ll straighten up, but they are such big cynics.

  I should have told you My lotto #’s 2-11-19-23-36

  is what’s written in front, beside the silk screen

  for Listerine Cool Mint PocketPaks™—

  which means you can’t hijack my name;

  no, you have to go find your own, like a Hopi brave.

  You might have to sit in a sweat lodge until you pass out

  or eat a weird vine and it will not be pleasant. Your pulse

  goes staccato like a Teletype machine — then blam

  you’ll be transformed into your post-larval being.

  Maybe swallowtail, maybe moth: trust me, I know

  because once I was a baby-blue convertible

  but now I’m this black hot rod painted with flames.

  Rebuttal

  My quarrel with the Old Masters is: they never made suffering big enough —

  that tiny leg sliding into the bay almost insults me,

  that it should be all we get of the falling boy after the half-hour stunt

  of his famous flying. Don’t you see

  they are cartoons? the drunk hissed

  in the British Museum, a drunk in a sport coat

  that made him look credible at first, some kind of docent,

  an itinerant purveyor of glosses that left me

  confused. I studied Brueghel’s paintings, tiny

  skaters, and hunters come home with tiny dead animals

  gutted outside the frame, where the tiny offal

  presumably had been left. I was looking for Icarus

  but the Musée des Beaux-Arts is in Belgium you twit

  and so I did not see the plowman wearing his inexplicably

  dainty shoes, a cartoon you American sow,

  and no one came to my rescue in that gallery vacated

  even by its dust. Where I also did not see the galleon

  anchored below the plowman’s pasture with its oblivious,

  content-with-being-tiny sheep. But just wait

  until that ship sails out

  and encounters the kind of storm that’ll require Abstract

  Expressionism to capture the full feeling of.

  The giant canvases of the twentieth century!

  Swaths of color with no figures in them at all!

  How immense the drowning when you’re the boy who drowns.

  Between the fireball on your back and the water in front

  all gray and everywhere and hard as concrete when you smack down.

  A Romance

  As a child, I saw a child set down her binder like a wall

  through the candy bin at the Corner Luncheonette

  so she could shoplift gum while she spoke to the clerk —

  and from that moment was in love: Oh theft.

  College was supposed to straighten me

  like a bent tree strangled by a wire,

  but being done with sweetness I could not resist the lure of meat.

  How the red muscle gleamed in its shiny wrap,

  a wedge that had once been the thigh or the loin

  of a slow brute’s body, sugar-dirt and clotted grass

  to be snatched in an instant

  and zipped into the crone-y-est of pocketbooks.

  Radiance housed in rawhide again, as when it was living.

  A steak can be stuck in your jeans when you’re skinny,

  a rump roast is right for a puffy down coat,

  small chops will fit under a thin peasant blouse

  where it falls off the breasts

  like a woodland river

  with a limestone amphitheater underneath.

  Ancient city, ancient sublet, ancient wooden fire escape —

  with my other bandits I learned to say how-de-do in French.

  We were yanking on the cord that would start the motor of our lives

  though we did not have the choke adjusted yet.

  Sometimes it seemed I floated in the dregs like a tea bag

  bloating up with facts.

  Until a girl ran in the door, panting hard, face red,

  slab thudding

  from her snowflake-damasked waist onto the table,

  and we stood around it gawking at the way it seemed to breathe.

  from Notes from My Apprenticeship

  THE CHAMBER

  As does the poem by William Blake, this involves a poison worm,

  a worm that would make the blackbird who ate it

  flap and squawk in distress

  while at regular intervals I played a tape of a bird

  also squawking in distress, so you see

  there was this salt-box-girl regression going onr />
  while I took notes: Now the bird is squawking in distress,

  my job being to watch on closed-circuit TV

  and record the bird’s death, were that to occur

  in the chamber made from a gutted fridge

  rigged up to a button in the next room

  where, when I pushed, I’d hear a musical plink

  over the loudspeaker as a mealworm dropped

  from a crown of vials that sat on the chamber,

  the crown rotating as the glass vials tipped,

  one worm per plink, though I sometimes plinked twice

  if the worm got stuck

  or if the bird failed to squawk

  in that tiny brick building that rustled with wings

  from birds scritching in cages

  I’d been filling for weeks,

  my truck full of traps I set on fence posts at dawn,

  when the redwings clung

  to tall blades in the ditches

  and sang shuck-shreeek as the dirt road fumed

  behind me in the mirrors, unveiling a rising

  red-winged sun that I drove into

  feeling immortal,

  how could I not feel immortal

  when I was mistress of the poison worm?

  SUPER 8

  There were so many black birds I could not count,

  homing on this patch of dusk. My boss’s idea

  had been to spray them with spangles

  so that, if found, the finder would know

  the bird had stopped here at this cornfield

  behind the Super 8 motel. That is,

  if he could imagine the helicopter

  with its tank of glue and light.

  Otherwise, he might just wonder at a spangled bird.

  We untangled them from the mist nets

  and brought them into the bathroom’s white tile grid

  thirty feet east of the blacktop stripe,

  where I counted the spangles, a soldier

  in the tribe of useless data. Afterward

  I walked them back outside two at a time

  and opened my fists, where the birds paused

  just long enough to leave their own data on my palms.

  Here’s what we think of

  your spangles, your starlight. Then the night flushed

  them up into its swoon — however faintly,

  the corn glittered as the birds resumed their ravening.

  Incubus

  While the spectacular round butt of the fat junkie sitting on the curb

  rotated upward from his belt —

  the legs of the skinny junkie wriggled upward from a dumpster.

  And when he stood, I saw

  his familiar figure, thinned —

  two times he’d snipped my kitchen with the scissors of his hips

  while he directed stories from the rehab clinic toward us

  ladies in our panty hose,

  our fingers sliding up and down our wineglass stems.

  Later, in the cloak of his jean jacket,

  he slipped upstairs and stole my pharmaceuticals,

  my legitimate pharmaceuticals! —

  so an awkwardness descended on the realm of gestures

  there in the alley behind the YMCA, where I looked at any alternate —

  pothole, hydrant, not buttocks,

  don’t look at buttocks, don’t look at dumpster, don’t. Look:

  I would have been a crone to him,

  and he would have been my pirate son,

  my son who sleeps beneath the bridge

  in the cloak of his jean jacket, dabbed with fecal matter now.

  Still, when he comes at night,

  brass button by button

  and blade by blade — his skinny thighs —

  I open myself like a medicine cabinet

  and let him take the pill bottles from my breasts.

  First Epistle of Lucia to Her Old Boyfriends

  Not infrequently I find myself wondering which of you are dead

  now that it’s been so long since I have had a boyfriend

  for whom this wonder would be a somewhat milder version of

  the way our actual parting went — i.e., with me not wondering

  but outright wishing that an outright lightning bolt

  would sail sharply into your thick heads.

  Can I plead youth now over malign intent?

  And does my moral fiber matter anyhow

  since I have not gone forth and et cetera’d —

  i.e., doesn’t my absent children’s nondepletion of the ozone layer

  give me some atmospheric exchange credits under the Kyoto Protocol

  to release the fluorocarbons of these unkind thoughts?

  Anyhow what is the likelihood of you old boyfriends reading this

  even if you are not dead? Be assured your end is hypothetical.

  Also be assured I blush most furiously

  whenever that tower room in Ensenada comes to mind

  where the mescal functioned as an exchange credit for those lies you told

  about your Alford pleas and your ex-wives who turned out not ex at all.

  Anyhow the acid rain has caused my lightning to go limp

  over bungalows where you have partial custody of your teenagers

  and AA affirmations magneted to the fridge

  from which your near beers sweat as you wonder if I’m dead,

  since the exchange for this-here wonder is your wonder about me.

  Even though it shows my nerve — to think you’d think of me at all —

  I await word of your undeadness

  PS: along with your mild version of my just reward.

  Raised Not by Wolves

  The family sank into its sorrows —

  we softened like noodles in a pot.

  Whereas the bicycle’s bones were painted gold

  and stood firm against the house

  no matter how hard it rained.

  Beneath the handlebar mount, it said ROYAL in red letters

  unscathed despite the elements;

  this was the bicycle’s first lesson,

  to be royal and unscathed —

  I pressed my ear-cup to the welds.

  Pedal furiously, then coast in silence.

  You will need teeth to grab the chain.

  Exhortations with the stringent priggishness of Zen,

  delivered by a guru who hauls you off and wallops you

  in answer to your simple question.

  Though its demise is foggy,

  I can conjure with precision its rebukes, the dull sting

  when the boy-bar bashed my private place.

  Then no talking was permitted

  beyond one stifled yelp.

  You could, however, rub the wound

  with the meat of your thumb — so long

  as you did this stealthily, pretending you had an itch.

  Job Site, 1967

  Brick laid down, scritch of the trowel’s

  downward stroke, another brick set

  then the flat side of the trowel moving

  across the top of the course of bricks.

  My father stepped from the car in his brown loafers,

  the rest of him is fading but not his loafers,

  the round spot distended by his big toe.

  Brick laid down, scritch of the trowel’s

  downward stroke, the silver bulb of the door lock

  sticking up as I sat in the car,

  the kid in the dress. Newark burned

  just over the river, not so far south

  as the South of their skin — deepening

  under the ointment of sweat, skin and sweat

  they’d hauled from the South

  brother by brother and cousin by cousin

  to build brick walls for men like my father

  while Newark burned, and Plainfield burned,

  while the men kept their rhythm, another brick set,

/>   then the flat side of the trowel moving

  across the top as my father crossed the mud.

  I sat in the car with the silver bulb of the door lock

  sticking up, though I was afraid,

  the kid in the dress, the trowel moving

  across the top of the course of bricks.

  You can’t burn a brick,

  you smashed a brick through a window,

  the downward stroke, another brick set,

  but to get the window first you needed a wall,

  and they were building the wall,

  they were building the wall

  while my father, in his brown loafers,

  stepped toward them with their pay.

  Postcard from Florida

  After paddling out, I found the manatees

  in canals behind the pricey homes,

  as I once found the endangered Hawaiian goose

  beside the hulks that once were dream cars.

  So the scarce beast gets its camouflage

  at the farthest outpost of our expectations:

 

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