The dark sour-mash smell of leather hovers in the sweat-stained heat As the truck snarls, awakened its tires in their Sisyphean tread find the familiar road around the lake The rounding concentric lines of regret I trace like an addled palmist. When you spend so much time lost you find comfort in the surety of banal paths. I am an adult But I never left the womb of this town, wrinkled offspring of a tired mother Who carries me in a low-slung belly Drying and stretching in endless vessel. She knows I tried to leave her once Across the world In another womb, green and fecund and full of death and like the lukewarm believer I am, I was spat out crawled back to her. She swallows me back up Like the drowning boy in the lake ***** in water. If only the weight in my mouth Could float in water, like the styrofoam buoys Could float to the top, in a dead manβs float but itβs all too well-moored, concrete and clay. I am silent I am silent Cruel mother, You know I will never Have the courage To leave.
inspired by the prompt: I am an adult but I never left the womb and "Speaking of Courage" from Tim O'Brien's "The Things They Carried."