A creature made of bush and red dust
keeps licking its bones on my doorstep.
I hear it wailing and thrashing
while my sons sleep.
I offer it water,
offer it meat,
but it t h i n s t o p a r t i c l e
and moan
in half light.
At two, the hour of the night heron
and the new mother
a cell of starlit eels thread themselves
through the beams in the ceiling.
What holds us up is frayed and
not quite.
I dream myself into
moss wings and legs strong as mora
but in the morning I am clay again,
I am milk and dough and unhealed wound,
I am only task, only matter, only mass
only a rough gathering of others’ needs,
loosely woven, frayed
and oh, time ticks me wooden and
threadbare
from dawn till dark, till the hour
of the fawn till the song
of the frog till the
deepest dream
where I am flying, till the beast
made of bush and dust comes calling
comes crying out
my name
in the hush of spent rain
in the absence of sleep, in the violet
tunnel of stillness,
while my children sleep, while all light thins,
while I thrash inside the ache of being unseen.