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Prelude to Bruise

Page 3

by Saeed Jones


  I pressed into you, into you and away

  from all the breaking. I didn’t know

  your name, so I kissed one

  into your mouth. Told myself

  I have a body to hold this morning,

  then held my own when you

  walked out into the sirens.

  KINGDOM OF TRICK, KINGDOM OF DRUG

  after Lucie Brock-Broido

  I.

  I lick the sycamore inked onto his sternum.

  Hard, sweet ridge of the chest, valley I send sweat into.

  With a pen, I bleed mangled birds onto him: robin,

  kestrel, sparrow. Pointed tip of his finger

  holding them down, he counts. Lest they fly away,

  lest they leave him naked and plain. My head against his chest,

  robin, kestrel, sparrow, I say, one for each pill.

  II.

  In bed, we keep combat boots on, scrape our shins

  climbing each other—which is to say: I dream I’ve dragged a tree

  into bed with me. Bark against my back, roots and clumps of dirt

  poking out from beneath the sheets like feet. Each hour,

  another season. It pushes cherry blossoms against my closed eyes,

  then just as soon burns leaves red like autumn.

  III.

  Four nights in, I still don’t know his name. And each kiss

  is the aftertaste of pills, a white cloud on the tongue. He hates

  the names I give him: Tantalus, Orestes, Ganymede. I don’t

  need a name he says, sky-high in the shower, the birds leaking

  into stains on his stomach. Orange bottle in hand,

  I answer Hyacinth and Vicodin. I answer Xanax and Zephyr.

  IV.

  Before he leaves, I tell him about a girl running

  through a grove. She trips, gets up just in time. The ground is so unkind

  laughs the god chasing her. But she’s calling out now.

  You won’t have me. Like it’s already over, like she knows.

  She stands her ground and leaves weave into her hair. Her skin tans,

  then cracks open into bark. And in the branches

  of her raised arms, birds.

  BLUE PRELUDE

  Last night, the ceiling above me ached

  with dance. Music dripped down the walls

  like rain in an old house. My eyes followed

  the couple’s steps from one corner

  to the other, pictured the press of two chests

  against soft breathing, bodies slipping

  in and out of candlelight. The hurt

  was exquisite. In my empty bed, I dreamed

  the record’s needle pointed into my back,

  spinning me into no one’s song.

  IN NASHVILLE

  At the Silver Saloon, you show me

  what a white boy in Wrangler Jeans

  can do with my moves. The electric

  slide grinds with boot-scootin’ boogie.

  Two steps to the left, a sunburned woman

  outdoes me entirely, throws in some hip

  just to call me out. And I feel a bit

  betrayed, dancing in this crowd

  of snakeskin boots and red, white, and blue

  rebel tattoos with the moves I thought

  I had some kind of claim to, a way

  of mapping out hell with my feet.

  4

  HIGHWAY 407

  Lewisville, TX, August 2011

  4 a.m. walks past my wreck

  and waiting

  I am done.

  Your grief will be useful some day, says no one.

  Roadside, my ear still tuned

  to asphalt, its moon-crater skin,

  I wait.

  The high grass calls you

  out of silence.

  A vixen,

  apparition

  already trotting back:

  oh mother

  beastly,

  I stole the planets,

  your wet, black eyes.

  I lick the dew-damp dirt

  but your feet leave

  nothing behind.

  I wait

  hours into quarters.

  Trucks pass,

  white noise trailing radios

  like limbs

  scattered on the road and I am made

  of waiting.

  My shut eyelids find me

  but I know you are not done

  with my sleep,

  dead woman.

  Behind nothing, I wait.

  Leave your feet.

  I lick the dew-damp dirt,

  your wet, black eyes.

  Oh mother,

  already trotting back,

  apparition,

  a vixen.

  Out of silence,

  the high grass calls you.

  I wait,

  roadside, its moon-crater skin,

  my ear still tuned to asphalt.

  Your grief will be useful some day, says no one.

  MERIDIAN

  Cinders drift in

  from a fire we can’t see.

  A breeze

  of sparks, the smell of mesquite

  smoked, crackling.

  It could be a family grilling

  or another acre

  gone to hell. In this heat,

  third week, one hundred degrees

  in the shade.

  We’re dry tinder.

  Water won’t answer our questions

  anymore; turns to mirage

  when touched.

  Forget clothes. Heat knows

  what I want to know: the river

  of sweat through the canyon

  your back becomes

  when my tongue comes

  to cool you. Two men

  on fours in this razed field, red clay

  to roll in.

  You are my sky burned

  to blazing, the dazzle

  before my body’s exhausted

  collapse,

  fingers singed,

  breath,

  blue flame.

  MERCY

  Her ghost slips into the room wearing nothing but the memory

  of a song: thin as a note lost in a little girl’s throat,

  mercy.

  If fog had a sound,

  if the moon decided to hold its breath,

  if she ever heard the way I cry out in my sleep,

  mercy.

  She knows I’m not well, sees the dark circling my eyes,

  one more inheritance,

  mercy.

  Her stare traces me

  and a hand reaches out but Mama, I don’t know the words.

  MISSISSIPPI DROWNING

  I’ve lined my throat

  with the river bottom’s best

  silt,

  allowed my fingers to shrivel

  and be taken for crawfish.

  I’ve laced my eyelashes with algae.

  I blink emerald.

  I blink sea-glass green.

  I am whatever gleams

  just under the surface.

  Scoop at my sparkle. I’ll give you nothing

  but disturbed reflection.

  Bring your ear to the water

  and I’ll sing you

  down into my arms.

  Let me show you how

  to make your lungs

  a home for minnows, how

  to let them flicker

  like silver

  in and out of your mouth

  like last words . . .

  CASKET SHARP

  Your soft cough becomes prognosis. Soon,

  cigarette smoke is the inkblot test of lung.

  Tell me what you see

  and I’ll sleepwalk home

  to pick out your first and last charcoal suit,

  a jade handkerchief for the pocket atop

  your excavated chest.

  I see two men, father & son

  but
let’s not get ahead of ourselves, goner.

  And now?

  A dirge parades past the empty house,

  black silk parasols in hand.

  I see butterflies of smoke and blood.

  And in the aisles of a half-lit church, strangers

  walk away from you, whispering, “He looks

  good, real sharp.” Handsome enough

  to bury.

  DOMINION

  His mouth bleeds when he starts

  to sing, but—bless him—he licks

  the taste of ruby from his teeth

  and sings anyway. Thin blade

  of glass lodges in each note,

  listen—

  he’s trying to be better than the rain.

  You shut your eyelids to keep him

  from slipping into your father’s

  rumpled body; you stare down

  the muddy light locked in the ice

  of your drink, but damn if he hasn’t

  dug up your old man’s throat.

  THE FABULIST

  He puts my hand against his chest

  so his nipple can read the lines on my palm.

  He insists in his certain voice

  that the beat in his chest isn’t a beat at all

  but an echo: the sound of two fearful feet

  heading down into some poorly lit cave

  made of bats and blood-red gems.

  He tells me again. He’s told me before.

  The feet walk slower the farther down they go.

  No, I say, taking my hand back.

  It’s a heart. It’s always been a heart.

  I say it once for him, once for myself.

  He steps back and looks at me;

  he needs to tell me the story again.

  ROOM WITHOUT A GHOST

  Sheer, breeze-caught curtains aren’t full-bodied,

  just billowing. The wind isn’t trying

  to touch you. Papers rustled, then scattered around the room

  mean nothing. Do not read them

  in the wind’s order. Do not fall to your knees,

  deciphering the air and its invisible ink, or look up wide-eyed,

  expecting. No one is standing there,

  backed against the haze.

  Not him. Not him.

  No one is watching you but you.

  DIRGE

  With my head half devoured

  by fog, I lock myself in your room. Light drums its fingers

  against the window, then three bright fingers

  finish the dirge on my skin. You are everywhere but where

  I need you. Nose pressed to your last pillow, even the memory of your breath,

  slipping.

  I don’t sleep so much as attempt to erase.

  When I wake, beside me on the bed is a Ziploc bag from the hospital. Inside,

  your scissor-shredded clothes, a row of your teeth.

  Come back now. Come back

  and put your hands over my mouth.

  AFTER LAST LIGHT

  A moonless night cliff-side steals the sea

  from us. What was sapphire beyond churlish blue

  is just howl now: waves darker than closed eyelids

  wreck the rocks we also can’t see. Sunlight forgot

  the two of us here. The taste of salt, an ungiven kiss

  on our lips. And silence is the rush of blood

  in our ears, a violent pause between your question

  and what I will not say. I have no answer;

  my throat is the ocean now.

  HOUR BETWEEN DOG & WOLF

  I.

  Before the only unbroken mirror, cobalt kimono

  undone, embroidered sea at my feet

  I’m the self-portrait of my father.

  Eyes deep as ravines, night-lined ribcage,

  even the rage is his,

  this dusk between both of me.

  II.

  In an hour colored tourmaline, I mistake your guitar

  for a body in sleep and smash you into effigy,

  splinter your way back into my skin.

  My silk-wrapped fists shadowbox your incessant reflection

  and break myself back open.

  POSTAPOCALYPTIC HEARTBEAT

  I.

  Drugged, I dreamed you a plume of ash,

  great rush of wrecked air

  through the towns of my stupor.

  And when the ocean in your blood went toxic, I thought fire

  was what we needed: serrated light through the skin, grenade

  in the chest—pulled linchpin.

  I saw us breathing on the other side of after.

  But a blackout is not night; orange-bottled dreams are not sleep.

  II.

  I was a cross-legged boy

  in the third lifetime,

  empire of blocks in my lap while you walked

  through the door of your silence,

  hunting knife in one hand, flask in the other.

  I waited for you until I forgot to breathe,

  my want turning me colors only tongues of amaryllis could answer for.

  It owned me, that hunger,

  tendriled its way into my name for you.

  III.

  In a city made of rain

  each door, a silence; each lock,

  a mouth,

  I walked daily through the spit-slick streets, harbingers on my hands in henna:

  there will be no after

  Black-and-blue-garbed strangers, they called me Cassandra. (I had such a body then.) Umbrellas in hand, they listened while they unlistened.

  there will be no after

  no.

  the world will end

  no.

  you are the reason it ends

  no.

  you

  no.

  IV.

  I didn’t exactly mean to survive myself.

  Half this life I’ve spent falling out of fourth-story windows.

  Pigeons for hair, wind for feet. Sometimes I sing

  “Stormy Weather” on the way down. Today, “Strange Fruit.”

  Each time, strangers find me

  drawing my own chalk outline on the sidewalk, cursing

  with a mouth full of iron,

  furious at my pulse.

  V.

  After ruin,

  after shards of glass like misplaced stars,

  after dredge,

  after the black bite of frost:you are the after,

  you are the first hour in a life without clocks; the name of whatever

  falls from the clouds now is you (it is not rain),

  a song in a dead language, an unlit earth, a coast broken—

  how was I to know every word was your name?

  5

  HISTORY, ACCORDING TO BOY

  1

  Boy is not one of the Boys, but Boy is observant.

  At the edge of the basketball court in the park, by the locker on the far, far end of the locker room, by the punch bowl at homecoming, by the punch bowl at prom, nothing gets past Boy.

  If you cut open Boy’s head, at least fifty notebooks would fall out, each full of what Boy has written down with his eyes.

  The Boys throw their words like sharp stones, and Boy takes note. Other notes: nipples pressed against sweat-slick t-shirts during games of catch, bulges in basketball shorts and sweatpants, hands that are not his hands slipping below the waists of the Girls during slow dances.

  2

  Some of Boy’s notes are dreams.

  These notes are recorded on the undersides of Boy’s eyelids. After tonight’s homecoming dance, Boy dreams he has the body of a girl,

  a song only he can hear.

  3

  A war burns at the edge of the map Boy lives on.

  On clear days, Boy can see smoke rising in the distance like an old god. Boy makes note of battles the smoke reminds him of: Gettysburg, Wounded Knee, Atlanta.

  The Boys enlist. The Boys start weari
ng boots and camouflage hunting clothes to school. In the hallways, they shoot each other with guns only they can see.

  They die bright, fantastic deaths every chance they get.

  In English, D (one of the Boys) sprays the classroom with pretend bullets. The Boys clutch their chests and fall this way and that way.

  D doesn’t think to shoot Boy.

  Below his desk where no one can see, Boy presses his palm against a pretend bullet wound in his thigh to stop the bleeding.

  Boy thinks D is going to be a beautiful dead soldier one day.

  4

  Boy lives in a house made of guns.

  At night, Boy’s father and mother sleep curled around each other like snakes. The pistols and rifles on the wall above their bed twinkle like dark stars whenever a car’s headlights shine into the room’s one window.

  Boy knows these things because Boy cracks open their bedroom door and takes note of how they hold each other in their sleep.

  Another note: They sleep like they are rehearsing for a play about sleeping.

  5

  Boy’s father takes him to the shooting range every Saturday.

  Boy enjoys these trips as much as Boy’s father does. It is their one good thing.

  Their very first visit, when Boy was twelve, Boy’s father stood behind him, traced his arms along Boy’s arms, and gave advice about how to hit the black paper body a few yards ahead.

 

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