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By Madison Date: 2002 Aug 12 Comment on this Work [[2002.08.12.20.41.22741]] |
It's more than a shift
in the fault lines
as I drive through
Texas winds
you told me once
were raining sand. I wonder now
if this is what I feel
or traces of
a thunder summer morning.
Remember on the patio, how
I slipped behind you naked
in your chair as you
rolled a cigarette.
We pushed the world away,
the sun at rest behind a
rain that carried on its breeze
her mist
across our skin. Your
lips, wet from cloudburst spray,
descended to the
sigh of my hips, my hollows,
in slow unhurried
sensuality; I'd never
seen your eyes so finely tuned,
as you bent me back across
the wooden bench.
The sky, a sauna bath, hung
above young deer as they lay
on sheets of silver grass
in a rain-soaked sleepless field.
Your umbrella body
over mine, dark over light,
the crackling sky crashing
through you; my head,
rocked against the
chimes as you made me
new again.
Above white dashes
on the heated summer road,
sun-bleached air blows another
gust of sand across
the windshield of my car.
Pond illusions rise above
the asphalt, black and softened
in the scorch of afternoon.
From the other side of
someone else's mid day
mirage, I thicken into view.
My mouth,
fixed to the taste
of your salt neck and to
your legs, bronzed in these
days without me.
My heart rises like a bird
above the sea, spilling over
in all of the
beautiful eccentricities
of you, in the moments put away,
and I become not woman, but
horse and cart to carry
these armfuls
of sweet emptiness.
12 aug 02
M Madison |