hair an unborn rain color
lips a flower-breath festival eyes a double sunset fingers in winter sift firewood ash to rescue spent nails from common burial feet in spring re-search back alleys where hands scavenge rusted bolts broken blades small tangles of wire a whole-body finale upon the strike of midsummer's noon charges its garden armed with a double-handled digger twelve holes later under stinging shower she circles and begins a wait for the new of the next moon at that exact moment by lantern light she feeds in her yearly steel-crumb collection backfills each hole with drooling soil then celebrates with raisins and juicy pitted prunes she nourishes the earth she must because some men have bled its metal out she nurses the earth she must because she must so she reaches a fist out to the night pulling in a positive charge then amused by its sudden gravity in her chest tunnels through her unlit house all the way to the mirror to laugh at the image of a servant who drops to her knees on warm mornings and fingers the globe like a rosary bead First published in January 2022 in Tiny Seed Literary Journal
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