Ghosts splash about
on the ice house wall,
beer chitters in the jar,
stories are told in fits and gnarls.
The moon is a bleached breast
in its brassiere of dappled smoke,
up above the cracked wet wire
in the driftwood garden curl.
In a slant, we all watch
a woman across the alley
in her blue dress, scanning
her hands for news of the heart.
In the near square, a thin man
is also a plume, standing shirtless
on his crystal wash of balcony.
The street sings: sea static.
All these people walk blithely by
as rain and steam take turns
on the roulette wheel.
I feel the weight of my interior,
I feel the limit of skin, the world
that ends there. I'm not sure
I belong here at the gathered table:
I'm a reflected photo negative.
Leaves spiral overhead
as the green-bedded steps
rise up in blotches to meet me.
Loaves of clouds hunt and burst.
Whatever is behind me
presses me forward;
but whatever is ahead
pushes me back.