Your bow is all elbow, a flank of forearm that is supporting and simply cradling my imagination where a dozen or so lifeboats hang off starboard in case things get too much
I, captained by your sturdy arms, nip up to the crow’s nest for a sip of spiced *** for a bit of warmth and perhaps more—
a full beard that reminds me so much of Darwin I feel certain I am on the Beagle and hungry to shoot some lame birds one by one!
Your shoulder where I can sleep forever— come sharks and eat my catch while I whisper poetry, summon ghosts and ******* Hemingway, whose macho act was betrayed by his pain-filled eyes and sensitively painted one-word skies
You, my aching hull in human form, rocking gently as the sea slows our progress knowing we are wishing away time too often
the working of the gyro prevents my seasick blushes we do not yet know each other that well but all is fine as I see it, your arms really are made of shipworthy wood and beneath deck, where I will sleep tonight above Atlantis’s cesspit, we just bounce off each wave, getting closer and closer to the moon but not yet arrived, has sleep come too soon for me tonight?
I’ll rest and stretch and groan like weary ****** do once Surya helps me turn out the light
*—Yes, once my ship did start to sink. I called until my throat was gone and ended up swimming a good distance until crucially a boat came by and pulled me out of the sea. I remember thinking: I should feel more grateful to be alive. I went back to where it sank and retrieved a few personal items, then I sat on the beach a wept as if the whole thing had just hit me.
Part Six of The Man Who Longed to be an Oyster (see collections)