Read Runaway Odysseus: Collected Poems 2008-2012 Page 11


  warm front to hold back her screams.

  I know she wants to pull out

  her hair like the strands are vipers,

  simply breeding a new pain to

  drench the old, shoveling another

  foot of dirt on the lover’s tomb

  until her hands blister and bruise.

  And still, she smiles.

  Even though I know it’s fake,

  I also know it’s the masques

  we craft that gild us into

  who we are. And as you

  smile that crowd of raised

  fists, I can only wish I made

  the same decision, crafting

  myself the way you are.

  Shrink

  My clothes are ill-fitting, whishing around me

  like a cold. I’m a syncope of me from

  before, back in a moment when I was

  muscle – as chicken lean as that was. A product

  of years spent running away from myself.

  But now, I’ve given up the hunt, strutting

  back in clothes that stick as well as tents,

  faintly bending where the elbows and knees should fit.

  This, this is not the way

  it’s supposed to feel.

  I’m supposed

  to grow up like ladders, but

  instead I’m melting in, learning how to bend

  my arms and legs to fit myself within this

  Houdini box – amaze the crowd, make them

  ask “How can he live like that and not

  suffocate?”

  It’s simple really – I just try and not think about it.

  It’s true…I weigh lighter than memory –

  you’ll have to look down in the

  floorboards in order to find me.

  Even then, you reel me in like

  a stick in the waters – nothing

  but shadow-puppets and glances.

  Something you might as well

  have never remembered.

  This is how someone fades

  to a whisper, as faint as a yesterday

  kiss – perhaps even fainter.

  April 10, 2010

  Shuttle Launch at Evening

  The runs of light make

  their highways through

  a countryside of dark, like

  raindrops washing windows,

  like pebbles skipping

  ponds, playing their

  summer hopscotch.

  But even with this flurry, this feat –

  graceful like a swan unfurling its

  wings like a flag – the light is only

  felt if it is seen. We stand within

  an arm’s reach, and you stand with

  your eyes struck open, letting the light

  shave your face colder than any blade.

  You said it curled every hair and nerve,

  but that you never felt warmer.

  I kept my eyes closed, though –

  I felt nothing but your breath snatched away.

  August 25, 2011

  Sibylline

  The overhead lights stretched

  out the wrinkles in his face,

  adding river valleys

  sloshed with their slow age.

  We’re both young – true –

  but only from different angles.

  You seem to have strangled

  so many more birthday

  candles in your time, all

  with the licking hunger

  of an exile back to home.

  You grow – village elder –

  into a deep shrink, the breath

  squeezed out, the balloon

  settling down into a nice home,

  complete with leftover beef

  for the pound dog and an

  edge of crisp picket fences

  (although if I may say so –

  mind you, simply as a

  friend – I don’t know why that

  always needs to be the case).

  April 15, 2010

  Slow As Possible

  I watch the family leave

  behind their picnic trash:

  the hollow cans with

  drips of cola, the mask of

  a potato-chip bag,

  the napkins crumbled like a

  poet’s secondhand work.

  I only sit there for

  a few minutes, watching,

  and I already see

  the magic of the plastic

  vanishing. They say

  it can take thousands

  of years for plastic

  to break up, but

  here I am, seeing plastic

  wash away as if

  a magician wiped it with

  the wand of a tree branch.

  The plastic composes

  into the grass, composing

  the sheet music for a

  song that’ll be beautiful

  deeper than its skin,

  but one that I won’t live

  long enough to hear.

  September 9, 2011

  Spectator’s Sport

  Our hair’s still greyed with ash,

  the cloud of withered drywall’s

  still stalled, and only

  now the dust is raining

  where we sit. We can only

  wish those wintered

  showers back into the house,

  hoping that it could put the fire out.

  The fire itself? It lioned its way

  from the oven and – when it

  got too hot in the kitchen – headed

  for the living room, coloring in

  the carpet with felt-tip pens.

  The smoke choked us out of the house

  while the melted house slipped

  back into itself, and – unlike when

  it was built – it did so now

  without our help.

  The neighborhood’s

  gathered, warming their chattered

  mouths with the cold, fooling

  no one but themselves about

  fires being a spectator’s sport.

  March 28, 2010

  Sunrise Sea

  Your grin floats like sunshine polish

  on the waters –a mirror that

  bends without a radio crackle. Your grin

  spreads its wings like butter and tosses a

  pebble upwards. The rock curls the

  water, casting off a thousand broken

  yous in squints of light like shipwrecked bottles.

  They say it’ll take a thousand years

  for that broken-tooth smile to

  sail around the world until the

  freight-train currents see it home.

  But what they don’t say is that a

  thousand years from now there will

  be someone else looking

  out at that same sunrise sea,

  desperate for something but not sure what.

  November 2, 2010

  Swings of Fists

  When I was just another child, the only

  times I never cast a shadow of iron

  was when I was swinging on my swing-set.

  I was a pendulum of glass

  and metal in those accelerations,

  throwing a reflection of light like

  diamonds and diamonds like

  a baseball, underhanded.

  My glasses were as large and thick

  as the tyrants who broke them – yet

  somehow, the sunshine still filled

  the glasses, brimming, until the

  afternoon sloshed over the edges.

  And the glistens of light washed

  through my braces, an engine of

  metals and wires – in the end,

  the light was either clean or sterile.

  Collected, it was all a silhouette

  with precio
us stones sewn in, and

  I would toss it, watch as it

  wrinkled in the soil. The swing

  would pull me back in those

  moments – I watched as the world

  took away from me my years

  of machinery. I felt natural and

  cracked again – a man among gods.

  Then, the swing pushed me forward.

  Then, I watched the world rush towards

  me, my metals in its hands.

  March 9, 2012

  Tea Kettle Rinse

  We rinse off

  our “sickness” in the

  tea kettle in the kitchen,

  fishing our trembled hands

  out of the sterile,

  boiled water,

  spoiled from our panic

  and slaughter of

  sense and good order –

  bordered with misunderstood

  whispers and rumors –

  this flu’s a ghosted

  tumor heavy

  enough to drag

  us to the drug store

  for tissues, soap, and dust masks flanked

  on all sides

  by magazine issues

  hawking front page ads

  that rank with the taste of bitter cigars,

  each ad charred

  with that slow, early evening burn.

  Turn bird flu in its grave;

  we got a new fear on the way.

  At least, that’s what the reporters

  and TV doctors all say.

  The Art of Reading

  I shake, rattle, and roar my way

  across each page

  and count my years in verses read

  and prose once said by

  men who walked the gardens

  and talked thoughts for a living –

  that was when you could buy

  food simply off

  what you were thinking.

  Food for thought,

  thought for food.

  And though my stutter

  is coming back and I lash my words

  with tongue in hand, I drink

  the words that run the page, I

  drink the wine out of their shells

  and leave these words

  as no more than

  husked, burnt

  rice in the winter’s swell

  as the snow drums up against

  the walls of my frozen home.

  The moment I learned to read,

  I evolved as I was no longer an

  island flung out across the world

  as I then found hopscotch

  to hop upon, every square a word.

  The Diamondlands

  I remember the blizzards there being

  more than splashes of cream. The

  flakes would scrub the ink out of

  the asphalt, and the roads would again be clean pages,

  waiting to be written.

  The snow would dig deeper than

  a heartbeat and plant its garden.

  For a few minutes in the morning,

  a fog would hang over the packed snow.

  Counting the helicopters of clouds

  overhead, you could say there were

  three shades of white on those mornings.

  Welcome to the diamondlands,

  where your feet could never tell the

  snow from jewelry dropped into

  the seams of the pavement.

  We could never tell the difference,

  and we never cared. Everything’s

  meant to crunch. A million pairs

  of new boots breaking new ice,

  the walking falling into the lakes at the street corners.

  But somehow through the blankness,

  there was still a cinema of moving light,

  the beams scattered like the roaches,

  but they were still there like the roaches.

  The traffic lights sent out signals

  to each other, and so did the doors

  when the doormen opened and closed them.

  There were a million lighthouses

  reaching out in the dark whiteness,

  blind but still reaching.

  In those moments, that city wasn’t

  the hottest place in the universe – but

  it certainly was the warmest.

  April 17, 2012

  The Funeral Home Library

  The coffins stared back at me

  in the living room, their eyes

  as empty as they still

  will be after they’re stuffed with

  bodies. The guys stood to the side,

  gnawing on cigarettes, the

  ends in a glow. Each inhaled

  slow, dragging the light

  down deeper – until it looked like

  they were chewing on the sun,

  trying to usher in an evening,

  and all before there should be one.

  “Let’s see this library of yours,”

  I said. I was already forgetting

  how to breathe, thinking of how

  bells were once built into coffins,

  remembering the stories about

  people waking up underground.

  Some say that doesn’t happen

  often, but even that is too much.

  I turned my back on those final

  rasps petrified in wood.

  Instead I buried myself into

  the library in the other room.

  Those books too were dreamed

  from wood – but those trees

  were slashed down

  for a much better good.

  March 29, 2010

  The Hand that Moves (The Stranger)

  You are the hand that moves me –

  you are the hand that moves me to move my right hand,

  to move my right hand to write hard,

  to write hard on a piece of paper –

  ah, the peace of paper –

  the piece of paper that I fold,

  that I fold into a paper airplane –

  a paper airplane whose destination is you –

  you whose left hand moves me,

  you whose left hand moves me to move my own,

  to move my own right hand to write and

  fold the paper into a glider,

  a glider for and to you –

  you who guide my hand

  with your own, and it is

  at those times that you

  have another right hand

  and I have another left,

  and though we keep each other

  company, at the same time we are alone.

  The Heart Buried at the Tower

  Every time you see that tower, the first

  thing you think of is death. You say

  it’s because of the tower’s colors, how it

  looks like a bucket rusted over, tossed away

  like garbage in this deserted desert. And

  of course, red means death, although red

  means blood, and blood means life.

  Red is the cream in the kiss.

  Red is the pump in the veins.

  Me? What do I think? I think the

  mystery ends with its name. Everyone

  in the village has called it The Tower.

  They think there used to be a castle there

  centuries ago, but decay grew up the brick

  like moss, and so the walls fell down

  like curtains at the stage. Some archduke’s

  plot of land, turned into a cemetery plot,

  a conspiracy of artisans and masonry.

  Don’t you see? That’s the thing: when

  a creature dies, the heart’s the first to go –

  it’s a drum stretched tight to rip.

  And when the heart goes, so does the

  blood, that hot spatter of grease. Some

  people think that when som
ething

  stops moving, death is nearby. But

  I think that when a creature dries,

  only then does that creature die.

  But this tower – this tower is different.

  Its skin of walls and moats and parapets

  has long since vanished, but that heart

  in the tower is still standing,

  still breathing, still beating.

  Maybe it’s the years of the afternoon sun –

  hanging over like a ceiling fan – that have

  baked the tower’s clay tougher than work even.

  Do you really want to know what it

  is? I think that as long as that

  tower never sinks, that heart forever lives.

  August 26, 2011

  The Midnight Sings

  Floor me with your

  metaphors while we

  walk these civilized

  garden with

  their flowers bowing

  to one another,

  laughing away

  the hours on

  the dizzy clock

  towering over the

  greenhouse green. We talk

  as we walk, watching the

  moon's glance getting

  cut and broken

  up in the silhouettes of plants –

  we notice this and

  so we string

  the leaves, making

  them waltz on

  the floor of the

  midnight hollow.

  The stars

  see this and

  they follow, until

  the sky's full with

  lightning bugs –

  the dew sees this

  and it follows.

  The plants see this

  and sing their

  love and raise their leaves –

  this time without

  us holding the strings.

  And at that, the midnight sings.

  The Night and Moon as Water Colors

  As a boy, I used to watch old movies

  and be amazed at how the world

  used to be the black-and-white of

  my pencil digging trenches in paper –

  and I remember being saddened

  as I looked away from the TV

  and saw a world painted over with

  too many coats of color, a world