she comes to me with every star
— every bird
greets me on my creased bed
She smiles—
in the long-silenced alarm clock,
in dry roses tapped on wall,
unkept cots of all my jasmines and shrubs,
— my missed classes,
in the cars talking outside
she says,
the dance has long began
I say, I am not awaited
she says she would like a waltz
I say,
please, go without me
here, I'll leave the window open—
she says,
I live in the dusty shelves
— in your abandoned body
I say,
I’ll clean today, scrub off my skin
I'll pull out the weeds
she says,
the air reeks of me
I say,
I’ll put on a song.
but the song wobbles like a paper-boat in a stream
it sublimes away with my breaths—
she watches me—
bath,
as I strip the bed naked, and redress him
as I feed my plants, as I
fold the clothes and tuck them neatly away
her lips meet my neck, as mine
meet the porcelain mug—
tongue trials down my back
as the sandy tea falls soundlessly in me
and I shiver
and she’s there in the unfinished painting
here on my dry skin, webbed eyes,
my jagged lips
I say,
I want you to leave
out this room— out this dressed up city
(her willowy fingers betrothed to mine)
— out these voiceless books
and feeble veins
my ****** sketch-pencils and
and the pictures you **** hue out of
(swords clashing— she aims her lips at mine)
I want you gone,
here, I'll leave the window open.
(and rips them apart; she turns me to glitter)
tell me to go and I’ll go,
she says, later.
tell me,
she says.
tell me,
she says.
tell me
when did death become so impatient