Tuesday, November 9, 2010

(9. Birdsong



Chapter Two| Jet and I sleep in the same bed, with only sheets and silk that separate our fleshes into being compressed into a single organism. The days with her blur and it is soon revealed that I am not sure where I begin or end, but it isn't in a longing or loving way—the furthest thing from love keeps us here. (Most nights I have to scramble from these sheets like an animal, almost savagely escaping from a deadly trap. I have to wheeze lightly like an asthmatic and untangle myself from the sharp juts of her arms, from the warm cocoon her body makes to mine. I have to whimper to be released from her tight embrace and she dreams the long while I do this of ripping apart bones and flesh and sinewy and devouring blood as ambrosia. After all what more can beasts dream of? ) The late afternoons I always wake first, and stretch like a cat to the sky, I am the most hopeless. This apartment is one small cry from a shit hole: the kitchen is a small cutout with thin cabinets and a small fridge that helps us survive. Jet isn't the type of woman to cook and neither is she to ever marry. Her shoulders are entirely too sharp to be feminine, and her heart, if such a thing existed, was far too cruel—she could never survive being a decent lover neither. The bathroom is like a closet with a shitpot and a bath I breath in, thriving as an amphibian counterpart to Jet; the living room is the place where most of the fighting occurs. I've lived with her a few days now, and already, I've counted the gleams of eyes and locked limbs of her and men locked on the couch. The bedroom was lined with comics, the backs of cereal boxes, and even the pages of magazine spreads she found herself enamored with, grotesque pictures of BDSM with long whips and mouths silence by gag balls—yes, these were the images I dreamt of.
I think back to my dream of her last night.
The sky is deep auburn that burns the sky, and the sand beneath my trekking feet is white. It is soft and hard. I hear drums that beat loudly and in an erratic rhythm and then from the prisoner veil, I see the naked shoulder, the naked form of Jet, except her skin isn't pale. It's a gorgeous flawless mocha. She is a native with her shrilling tongue. And when she smiles it is always that grin, that monstrously affectionate lazy grin that denotes nothing but suffering. There is no one who does not suffer at her hands. She doesn't speak but she simply turns her attention towards the large open mouth of large torture device, meant to bleed out its victim. Something of her own macabre construction, and I know this because I am privy to viewing her naked flesh working diligently until it sweat, bleed, and let her other orifices secrete moisture. Tribal queen in all her glory simply points. Her blood red markings cross her eyelids, the exact point of sensual curve to her lips, to her upturn palms, and down the feminine parts. Blacks coats her breasts in long thick strides towards her hips. The grin. Then, the soft patter of blood, of substance. I am to bleed for her.
They lead me to her crude steel monument, and she watches, those wolf eyes with the slightest curve to give a more humanly acceptable look. But she is far from it. The war paint and bare skin and beastly grin should be this indication, offering me up towards a god she hates.

This morning I watch her move her throughout the apartment dancing on the barely thread jazz flowing from cheap speakers we managed to savage from the dumpster of the adjacent alley. Her legs are long and her voice like a light badinage to the words; of course it isn't in her nature to know the words to this song, so she makes up her own. They are dark in response to the crescendos of pianos and cellos, to the flare of the trumpets. When she says this, I think she talks to me, so I turn my head and she has that secretive smile.
Her small breasts are clad in a silk pink bra and it looks like femininity. She's such a liar and is a monster that wears the skin of a woman. Just beneath the jutting bones I can peer at its truest face, but then she bares those teeth and I, the prey, move away.
Her wearing the pink bra bothers me. I hate the way the cup the creamy texture of her breasts and displays them lovingly. I want to tell her, but I don't. I don't tell her the things I hate about her, she only knows when someone has to love every dark, disgusting aspect of her.
When she looks to me, I pretend I look somewhere else. The telly perhaps but there is a sitcom on that I hate with a bloody passion and she knows it. I can feel her eyes heat. “Interesting?” She baits me, kneeling in front of me with her pink bra and matching panties that barely fit around the little curve of her ass, the knowing smile adoring her face. I look at her and shrug half-halfheartedly and she laughs, as her custom. “You can do better than that can't you?”
“I hate that bra on you,” I tell her suddenly. She regards me coolly as though I rebuked her and in a way I do. Swiftly she stands and pulls at my small tank, her nose wrinkled in disgust. She does this tenderly as though she were going to caress the slope of my skin, but it is all pretense. Everything wit her is carefully orchestrated, and brutally executed. It is her way. And if it is not followed, I would be the sacrifice she give the world for insolence.
“I hate your shoulders,” she says, glaring down before she moves off. I simply stare after her before turning my attention once more to the television, still watching her out the corner of my eye.

There were rare days when it seemed we got a surplus for income. I had very few talents, all of which included being a freelance photographer, and working behind the counter of a bookstore, the smell of misused and abandoned books settling so much dust on the shelves. Sometimes when I am in the most crowded places, I find myself smelling this particular smell, one that is hard to describe into words: it is a heavy musk that is both stale but surprisingly sweet. It is the smell of distant melancholy, I met him, there, with his perfect hair parted to the side, so pale it resembled moonlight, and his aristocrat features, with perfect aligning, carved from flawless alabaster and made flesh. He held Birdsong perfectly still in his hands, eyes scanning the synopsis—I didn't think he was an avid reader by the cloak that hid his tall frame from view. But when he moved gracefully to the counter, and placed the book on the glass with its worn spine, and I let my eyes move across him. Thick blond lashes frame his eyes, so much is seems his eyes are aliens with their strange mix of cerulean and indigo—closer to the pupil they are indigo, bleeding into lightness. His lips: they tell a story, perfectly formed, the bottom like a pillow for a lover to rest on. They are so pink it looked like he wore lipstick.
“Six dollars?” He asks softly, pulling a ten from his pocket and placing it on the counter, hand still on top of the bill. Veins are present through his flesh, which looks thin and like paper. “Is it a good book?”
I only look at the obnoxiously orange sticker on the cover to see the nearly ineligible writing of the girl that worked with her—it took the slightest of strain to be able to transform the scribble of ink into a number. “Yes. Six dollars.” I respond, merely ringing it up, the register automatically adding the tax. He can see on the screen but she still made no motion to pay until I whispered the price, noting the sun light that cut across his features. I had supposed his second inquiry was a reference to its comparison to A Farewell to Arms, which most male readers I've come into contact with enjoyed it because of the tragedy—so I told him so.
It was then he lifted his hand, and the ten was replaced with a twenty.
Just like magic.

“What is your romance?” He asked softly, using the spoon to stir sugar into the dark liquid of tea he ordered for me. In a small porcelain pitcher resembling the same Jet kept in her bathroom, pouring it over my hair every night in an odd, intimate ritual, is milk. He lifts his eyes then and tilts the pitcher and I watch the thicken milk pool into the tea. I hadn't had tea since I was a small child back in France, learning the etiquette of a proper woman. Of course, I failed horribly at learning how to function as a woman.
“Do you assume that I pursue romances because I'm a woman?” I questioned him, pulling the cup of tea towards me and giving the smallest of smile. I notice that his eyes seem to take in everything without much effort—even brightness of the light, the tint of one color versus another. I think it's strange but unbelievably beautiful. I want to sit on the curve of his lashes and sip this tea, perfectly sweet.
“No—I assume because you look French.” He nods his head in my direction as though confirming his words. I am aware now by the fact the he must have studied my features, more than the briefest glance. I sip more of the tea and push it off to the side, placing my hands palm down against the table. He moves his hands, which aren't much larger than mine over them, cupping them with a cool warmth. He asks me again for my romance, and I decide I will tell him. He is a stranger I've glimpsed among piles of books, and I have a worn spine. I am a tragedy.

People tell me that I have a small, hungry face. One that is triangular and peeks out from dark hair and large dark eyes. The notice my very pretty pink mouth and high cheekbones. Then they notice how petite I am but how I have developed well as a woman. They tell me I am beautiful. Most times, I do not listen; I still see myself as the obese child in France. The dark-face child whose eyes lit up like lights when they landed on sweets with icing and thick cream and raisins and honey. The child who did not belong and pulled restlessly at her dress and tore up her good leather pumps.
I began to hate France. I hated the wind I licked off my lips and the language of romance. I hated the curious tourist and their affectionate whispers. I hated to listen to these men speak their perfect french and raised their delicate eyebrows, only amusement coloring their faces. I hated all the things they loved most about this place. I hated the way they whispered magic lived in the air. And hated it the most because I was in love alone. I loved the mouths of all the men who told me I had pretty eyes. And they liked my mouth for one thing. I would close my eyes during the course of their soft thanks ushering from their lips and pretend the taste was icing, was their love for me. And after wards when they helped me from the ground and rub my knees and then my thigh;, I would cry, and ask if they could take me home.
I told my mother about them. All of them and they were all as William. I told myself I would marry a man named William and I prayed each one was him. She would slap me after each confession and pull my hair out in large clumps, and I would have to miss school because the fat lip and swollen cheeks might be questioned. I could not keep falling down the stairs every week. Then she told me I was too small and my heart was too big and if I was always hungry I should continue to stuff my face with donuts until I choked instead of swallowing their faithless, loveless, tasteless semen. But it had an acquired taste and it was love.
“Being a wallflower whore does not give you love. It gives you children you wish you had drowned in the Pont du Gard.” She spoke it gently brushing wet hair from my face, her eyes these wet stones that dominated her face. I was her reflection, her shadow, her sorrow. Most of all, I was her disappointment.
That night, the first William I had ever loved stood below my window, softly calling up to me. “Mon Petite, ” he cooed. I rushed down to greet him and he kissed my fat cheeks and led me away from the house. I wanted to call goodbye to my mother but held my tongue, bit my lip, felt his large hands over my breasts, smashed between my thighs and sex. I never felt more fat when he grabbed my hips, grinding the sharpness of his against mine. In the forests behind my house, he pushed me to my knees, unzipped his pants, his erection pink and pulsing, and freed and my mouth on it before the first of his pleads became lucid.
“Petite, quickly.”
I always felt ashamed after these moments when he would no longer be the gentle man who recited poetry to me but a man with a pink face, grasping hands, whines resembling animals caught in the back of his throat. I still thought he was beautiful when he arched his neck to the moon and the sweat shone on his face. And the bitterness of his love and the love of every William escaped him. I still thought it all was love, and what was love to me, when all things I loved could only be preserved by resting itself in my mouth and being consumed?
I wanted to make love to him in all the ways possible. I wanted his mouth on me as I had tenderly done to him. I wanted to hear the soft sounds of his pleasure and the thrill as he called me petite. In the bath, I had parted my folds to find my sex, lightly exploring the innocence as a writhing flower. Instead of the pleasure I had heard my mother receive nights she did this, I cried. I wept uncontrollably and utterly horribly. After I cried, I would lie on the base of the tub and stare towards the ceiling, small bubbles gathering at the edge of my lips and escaping to the surface.
It was a curious thing to do this, blink listlessly towards the heavens and think if I stayed here long enough, God might come save me. Finally, when the pain was too much, I would swim my way back into my body and seek air, loud gasp reminding I was back. I would cry harder at that realization.

He only smiled throughout the course of the story, and kept sipping the tea, his eyes trained passionately on me. I ask his name then , and he laughs, a slow husky sound that starts from his heart, I think. “Sinai,” he says softly, and I think Yes. A god. Finally someone to resurrect me from this death of mine. His eyes, ever so gentle, seem to warm with every passing second, pulled from the colors of coldness, “And you?”
I just coyly smiled and shook my head. “I'm the nameless,” I told him.



Tuesday, March 30, 2010

(8. Jetstreams


 Chapter One| The first time this black, vicious woman appeared into my vision, I was staring into the great blackness that had come to inexplicably resemble my life. The sky was pouring down as though some tragedy had finally stirred the clouds into a fit of sentimentality, and in result, I was a soaking thing left on the park bench. My long dark hair which I had often held as my crowning glory, now hung as course thread against my skull, surely white and pale in the darkness. It was the hair of a rag doll, and I thought it was truly fitting because it must surely be only stitching and stuffing that filled me. Bones could not be this soft and malleable. They were to be hard. And angry sometimes, with jutting bones to break flesh and be as the natural defense mechanisms against the scavengers of life. But I was just merely clothe. An item so easily constructed and damaged.
As smooth and languid as oil, she moved through the rain and turned her dark possessive eyes to me. I saw them gleaming even in the dark, the rain. She was the type of creature to which you easily became prey, no matter what animal you laid claim to. Her jaws could easily unhinge and devour you whole without a passing thought. This woman was everything I had ever hoped to be, a long-legged, arrant wolf. Only words could describe her as such.
Hello little ghost, I've been looking for you,” she purred easily, narrowing her eyes with pleased arrogance.
I could have fixed my mouth to tell her something. I could told her to fuck off or go to hell; I could tell her she was absolutely the most gorgeous creature that had been in existence or the most savage. But instead I fixed beady little eyes to her and let my mouth resume itself shriveled state, glaring at her for all intents. She was beautiful with wild black hair and almost golden colored eyes, but that face was drawn—long and intelligent; she was the monster of nightmares, with the sharpest teeth and the ugliest truths.
You look like a little drowned kitten. What are you looking for?”
Death,” I hissed at her I'm sure. I could feel the breathe fleeing from between my teeth and the cold rain pelting painfully against them. I could almost feel them shattering in my mouth, she laughed suddenly and pulled me roughly by my arm. Perhaps natural instinct made me like hateful, and we went crashing to the ground, rolling in water and mud. I could feel it slap against the corner of my mouth, filling it with its thickness. I spit into her face, pulled her hair, and immortalized her face into the mud, watching it cake beneath her eyes and in her stringy hair. I kept slamming her face until I saw red, mixing effortlessly with the mud. Then I stood above her, seeing her face down.
I hated the fact that she was so easily a wolf but looked as tamed as a dog.
I'm looking for the swinging pendulum of death,” I say after so long, when she frees her face from the mud and I watch it starting to dry around her head. The rain has long stopped and she stares at the sky unmoving. She barely breaths and when I prod her with my foot, her flesh is soft yet unyielding. She looks dead, she sounds dead. She's dead to me, and finally intelligences returns to her eyes.
There's no shame of that,” she murmurs as though it is an uneventful thing and stands; her rising is an epic moment, the equivalent of a goddess rising from her throne of slumber and shaking her godly hips to the winds. She yawns delicately and she looks at me while she picks mud from the strands of her hair.
She has this look of questioning, as though forcing something from her lips. It is one where such a thing would speak on secrets that will not be shared between strangers. And I think I will never forget this black wolf as it watched me in the rain. So she follows the lines of my arms and how it cuts into my shoulders and sinks to my chest.
I hate her. There is a such thing as to hate without loving.
Her hair is a wild mess again, framing her face. She appears thoughtful and nowhere like the woman I fought with for no apparent reason. I had felt the need to make her bleed and I did. Catching my look, she reads my mind, and smiles with that unjust manner.
'You're very rude,” I remark lightly. It is no way to injure her—I have no way. She is invincible once more even though her blood is on the grass, and under her nose, streaking like war paint. Even beaten she was a fucking kamikaze warrior with mud smeared across her severe cheekbones.
But she grins her grin and laughs. It is like razors to a vein. “Call me Jet.” She said lightly. “And I'll take you higher than you ever been.”
The words she meant to say was she would make me crash harder than I had ever before.

We went to her apartment as though nothing happened. The small allotted foyer was covered in our dark waste, her blood caked in with mud. I watched as she stripped herself completely of clothes in a quick, languid grace, before rummaging in her drawer, pulling out two fags, and lighting them up, staring out the window. It was still streaked with wetness and light pierced it in the slightest, casting her pale body in a slant of gray, just cut so across her breasts and smooth, flat stomach. And then across her pale thighs there was just darkness as if it were dressing her. I wondered how beautiful someone had to be standing naked and dressed by light and shadows.

Then she turned those gold eyes to me and blood was dried just under her thin nostril, and the red eyes of the cigarettes stared at me smugly before she handed me one, smoke streaming through her slightly parted lips. I wasn't a smoker, but I didn't exactly deny it and took her offering; the sweet mistress nicotine stuck her gorgeously pale neck into my system, and stretched herself through my veins. As we stared intently at each other, drawing smokes into our hollows chests, and blowing it in each others face, I thought then I was the wolf and she was the cat, but she stared at me as though it were opposite. Our gazes were hard things trying to peer past the oily darkness and residue that was in us, before it became entirely too much to see the reflection of something broken.
She shuffled away like sin and I watched her pale buttocks shifting in accordance to the shadows. These are wrong things to think, of a woman as a wolf and as a beautifully divine creature. But still I thought them. And when she returned carrying a single object, a long black shawl to clothe her. She then stripped me of my clothing and swept my dirty hair from my face and stared at it. A long drawn moment in which our breaths were shared and her lips were few inches above mine before she lead into the bathroom.
The tub was full and beautiful and I was alone as I rested against the base, completely submerging myself. All I saw was darkness and it was nice to be surrounded by all the dark and the light. But of course none of these things last forever, for when I emerged all her paleness was lit ethereally. She gazed at me as though I was a siren coming from the depths of the ocean to take her as mine.
A spell began amid the smell of the soap before she moved and gently took my wet hair and worked her hands through it. Her blunt nails were sharp and rapping at my skull but it was a sign of weakness to admit her cruelty. It was one where limits were tested; she was appeased and sat to simply wash my hair, spoon water into the pitcher and let it rinse my trenches. Then, she came to sit next to me, those ruby wolf lips curling.
You're a very beautiful girl you know. I'm lucky I found you,” she murmured, eying me critically. I did the same back, hollowly as through my eyesight was a myopic thing. I pretended to see past her skin and into the marrows of her bones. I pretended I knew every detail of her past, every lover she had ever had and how their ascension to heaven was quickly denied for the lustful remaints of hell. For a moment I thought to ask her had she ever been with a woman but she lit up a fag, and leaned back against the wall, the black thing that covered her exposed the smooth, tender flesh of her thigh. It was a thing meant and seen. It was known but never to be spoken. I could see the way she watched my lips, how her eyes took intently where my hands moved, how the water fell, rolled from collarbone to the end of nipples. But she won't ever say anything. I won't either. That is the way of weakness and love, to admit such a desire, was to be the first to break such a delicate line. Then, the magic is broken.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

(7. Anna Mizo

The nights in Anna Mizo* are stiflingly hot and its affects are strange on the people here. Babes are restless. The maids spill the milk. The husbands eyes wanders. The wives remain in bed, motionless. Some walk aimless around the small island, bumping into one another in dark, and sudden splashes of crimson permeate the air. Something sounds upon the ground. The birds scream in the trees and the ocean remains quiet.


"I have given up on this pathetic human experience," someone calls from the midst of dark, and the birds do not scream, but they weep. The clouds are a blushing gray and ash falls from them -- the winds, yes, the winds, lift the dew from grass. They drop blood into the sea. It is a clean, empty process, of earth cleaning its children, sweeping them into disuse.


It is a dusty brick house, I rest in, and the bed is large. It is empty -- sweat gleams on forehead, hair sticks to skin, his perfume lingers. I have no lover. His name would be something beautiful.


Something, I know already. The night would make him vigorous. We hear the neighbors go into hysterics and the walls are bathe in their blood. There are quick successions of suicide rates. The sounds of miniature thunder sounds -- and then, the rains come. They come in heavy sounds. I digress:
the winds pick up and the rains are swept like music -- the husbands, they roam the island with cocks hard with temptation and the maids creamy buttocks are lifted towards their eyes. The wives say nothing and the babies scream with the birds. It seems it is all is inevitable.


To conclude: I cannot sleep.


Such an abject loneliness often strays my desire for anything. Often, I am left hollow; it is rare I am roused enough to kindle myself so swiftly to completion. After wards I am lethargic. I cannot properly speak. Limbs refuse to move. Even the mind has shut down its curious inquiries, and only a faint reminiscent buzzing remained behind. In sparingly details, it thinks an early setting of the day while John had stood in the large mirror, adjusting the tie, smooth forehead creased, fingers working the dull routine of fixing a tie. Every morning I devoted myself to this task of simple affection, however, I still laid in bed, torn between dutiful, attentive lover, and the soft focused dreams of summer heat and unsung melodies. He was having difficulty, the tie, red like fire had slid between his fingers like water; his gaze shifted towards the bed and might have asked for assistance but his tongue stays.


His eyes have not left me. Still his heedless fingers continue their task overseen. And the creases in his forehead increases slightly with distant agitation. He must return to his wife now; she will not lie in bed restlessly and will ask where he has been. Why he smells of vanilla musk and rain? And why does his skin glow softly? Faithfulness strays his wandering interest and the promising sound of children laughter stirs that inner romantic in here. He loves his wife to an extent -- but he finds himself unable to return to her love confidently. Perhaps he is just in need of a conquest and the probability of infidelity might be excused to the nights of Anna Mizo. No one is safe from her sweltering heat or the musk of her plants, nor the raging lust and madness of her residents.


"I think you should give her roses this time," I told him; facing his pensive distracted expression would be a hard task to accomplish. I closed my eyes and heard the rustle of his pants and the shifting of his presence. In the mornings he speculates this and his gaze is a clear gray upon me unlike the previous night so grieved with need we never fulfill. In the end the lofty organ in my chest is frigid and must rest in the fridge until I find use for it -- those nights, I find use for it. For hours, he pours over it weeping and sometimes lamenting and other times, his tapered white fingers stroking it delicately. Now, he lays above me and solemnly his face scowls, his beauty sours in this late morning.


"You think my wife a delicate woman?" the question is soft and just short of a rebuke.


I smile showing teeth in lined rows like deadly weapons and the blue dripping buzz of a fly enters my ear distantly. He cannot yet hear it. I want to tell him of course I thought she was. She was blue-eyed resembling stones of sapphire set above her round cheeks -- a plump woman whose bust was superior to her sagging abdomen by mere inches, her neck when decorated with jewels were cuddled by her three distinct rolls. Her hair was style in a Marilyn Monroe reminiscent though the color was copper-ginger, the mole strategically placed near her lip dashed in a brilliant shade of erotic. Despite the three inch pumps and her sculpted calves, indents formed in the kneecaps like dimples, her legs smiling towards him. Her ankles swollen from the wet season. To comfort herself, she hides in the pantry and eats whatever item she can grasp. The weight of fat hangs onto her like robes, the creaminess of her thighs ruined by the spoiled nature of their origin, the collar adorning her neck the reserves of cum she had saved from her teenage days. Her behavior could be summed us as so: sulking for days in the sunlight room surrounding by piles of wrinkled laundry, eating in the basement when her husband is asleep as the twinkle of a child's night light sounds in the night, crying when he no longer asks her to couple with him -- instead he rolls over and slips into soft dreams of a gentle lover's slopes and skin more easily explored.


Instead, I say, "of course not". Thus the conversation ends and in the future she is brought up only passively.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

(6. mt. of virgins

 



i.

Thousands of miles laid beneath the trekking of feet modest of protection, and body malnourished given only to the careless thoughts to be sustained, the rest was lost in a love and burning desire,
so revealed in the spring when the ocean upon which she had blessed the name of her god
parted and dried its embraces from the knowledge of man; ambrosia had long fled,
and muteness took hold of their arrant mouths. And its mimicry became litany upon her features until the rosary of her hands were lackadaisical in their sounds, and her blood,vicious --

In nomine Patris et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti. Amen.
(In the name of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.)


ii.


Only a singular song was ever imparted over verdant fields she sprinkled with the seeds of poppy. The guided ways for the death, the soldiers, and the scores of beasts between forest and violence. She hides her modest face yet.
Only few broken murmurs imparts tongues foreign in their annunciation. Her eyes are gray, like death, they peer beyond the forceful juggernaut of war and merely blink. They are not empty, nor full, nor light, nor intelligent.
Sometimes dirty and sometimes they are girly. She is too old for these things and when those eyes are taken by surprise
they cannot be holy mother virgin eyes -- only the ways the wolves are when they are hungry.

They whine.

iii.

"a clockwork release. death is swift. the oranges bloom like prophets."

Shortly after she learns the meaning of fog and how quickly things disappear into the land; how things move as shadows, watching selectively. She watches how high fires can burn. How even the sun embraces small children into death among the lillies. She watches bibles burn with each page flickering and it flickers across her cheeks as breathing thing.
She never allows herself to move.
We say it is because she cannot hear, but her eyes are gray and they are still; they cannot recant the macabre --
they only be polite pallors.
Only the prophets speak. Among the black trees of death they gleam.
The bombs. She kissed. The feet, she cut. The children, she smacked.The guns, she slept.
The sun, she damned. The blood, she drank. Their tongues, she cursed and finally she had blessed of war
and wondered if the waterfalls shook and the mountains sunk into the earth would madness soon take ahold of their arrant mouths. And its mimicry became litany upon her breasts until the softness of her hands were ephemeral in their placement, and her sound, no longer virgin --

In nomine Patris et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti. Amen.
(In the name of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.)

(5. Adoles Speaks






February 12

Dear Isobel, 
     I hate the way  you are like liquid. Envelopes me in movements and drowns me to the sound of violin and children crying. And that, is significant to my own child, the one tucked underneath skin that lost its luster, and muscles suffering from dystrophy, and the lining of my organs that's been eaten away long ago, and even the fat that hangs there as discarded lullabies and memories, and parts of him I try to save.
     You hair like darkness but today is it the gold I always talk about and it is a halo of discontentment and destruction; you is a walking goddess finding death in every touch. And once upon a time, a sun. Unable to thrive in my darkness, the ones of my breasts, like odd French dancers smiling often, and the ones along my thighs never touched by the caress of a man.
     Only mine, you whisper on other nights I laid in your arms and cried about the only man I ever loved. He dug himself into my flesh, became a scar of living tissue. A sad-eyed boy kissed them and told me they were perfect. And you told me they were like crusted stardust. I said they were hideous because they meant I would always be his. 
     I told you to not find herself in the cavities of my stomach for it's so shrunken inside it's sticking to my spine. But you wouldn't listen and found yourself stepping round gravestones and the slummed yards and decayed buildings and hear the cries of hagel Hitler! and smiled when you said Jupiter was in orbit, just because you could.
     I never saw you again with that gentle smile but hands cold, in memory.  And I heard you as those lips for med the word god, and I was left standing asking: où est-il? in a muted voice with the sounds of thunder and lightning and death surrounding us. 

&

May 15
Dear Isobel,
          I am as untitled as my latest poems will be. Or as the existence of my love. I am sure you know these things by now; pointless dreams that come as heavy winged creatures with long mouths and sad eyes and those nights I stare at pink walls, for they desperately need a new coat, or wallpaper that won't peel when I pick at it.
          No matter the mundane things, the unmade bed, soft vocalizations of Billie Holidae; never mind the terrible sobs that might arise and shake the entire house at odd hours. My heart has decided to curl from it's dark tomb and sigh itself into existence and spill all confessions, unspoken, unnamed. I refuse to look at the words I write; for they are longing and envious for your voice, the flawless way the ugliest word becomes beautiful.
          After this storm passes, I will be silent. And not myself. But I will hope you call.
          I hope I still reach you from afar as, I am not long poetic, these winds are too harsh and smell of some failure, and do not deserve to caress you. Neither do these rains that spill as my soul.
          Yet, I yearn to be you as three shades of blue.


 

Saturday, January 2, 2010

(4.Isobel



How tragic! How utterly sad that even after all the silence I have given to you, I still hear the annunciations of your voice. I still ache to have you hear my words and understand how much you mean to me. My dearest Isobel, if I could write like Beethoven as he spoken to his immortal beloved and spoke it so that it is as beautiful as it is pathetic, then I would! My dearest Isobel!if only how Napoleon might speak to Josephine and tell her right at that moment how no victor is sweeter than her, is there any need for me to tell you I would.

My sweetest, I do suffer. Beneath the most hideous circumstances.
I love wrong and when I do it is not enough. I love but when I do there is none that understand it so. Only you. I am so sorry to have abandoned you after so long. (I hate they have all the words of the world and I have so little):


&


Dear Isobel, April 30
It has been a while since I picked up the pen to write of anything other than the milkiness of the sky in April. I wanted to tell you of all the things that happened this week, but now, it is rather trivial, the things whispered from the mouths of children. I do, sometimes, write a letter my nameless, and I am not sure if you are that one or someone else; regardless you and I share an intimacy not dared shared by any other. But I laugh, for it is better not to cry over these dark comedies.
I can hear you while you whisper these words, as you ask all questions. I can answer somedays, and today, maybe.
It has taken me three days to construct this and even longer to gather the courage: I am not dead. I still breathe the same stale air through a recycled mouth; I write down the progression of the wall cracks which form names. They are two that can break my heart, thick black lines like abyss.
From fear, I cannot pronounce either.

(I spill I spill I spill)

Friday, January 1, 2010

(3. The Cigarette Lover



To be quite honest, I'm really at an edge that I'm shaking to descend from. A plateau of such epic proportions, the briefest mention of anything other than how do I come back down seems irrelevant. Recently, I've taken up smoking, pulling in the thin steady stream of nictoine's paled flesh; it is a nasty habit I thought I'd never pick up. People, in the
most interesting of circumstances, changes.
A woman whose name I recall to be the equivalent of some flower sat me down with her clear gray eyes and gentle smile and asked me to review who I was; so I offered her a
half-lit cigarette, a cup of cold tea, and bread too hard. She kindly accepted it but didn't touch it, which I think it was best because it held some unneeded friendly pretense.
She didn't feel obligated to eat and I didn't feel to obligated to talk.
"Well, did you know yourself when you were a child?"   
Her lips fluttered with some unreadable dialogue, and I say this because were both actors in a poorly constructed play. She wanted more stage and I wanted more gleaming fans
I could flick of and tell to go to hell in a not so subtle way.
Me - "No. Should I have?"

I drove for a few hours after that conversation and decided I had been away from home for too long.
My mother was ill and the room was cold; I for a moment feared she had passed away, and then I realized, I didn't really give a shit either way if she did.
So I sat by her bedside, lit a cigarette, and stared down at her motionless face, her nostrils barely moved like delicate tissue stirring directly beneath wind as it flits through grass. I left with smoke curling round her little malnourished face.
My stepfather, was a bastard anyway, and slept on the couch, clutching the pillow to his chest and maybe he did it for good reason. I could see right through his facade of being a man when in truth, I knew his eyes always watched the sway of my ass and the bounce of my tits on occasion. I knew he was just as good as my fucking father. He's in jail by the by.
And the brother, the most loveliest little boy if I ever knew one. I promised myself when I was old enough I would take him far away and tell him everything about them I learned the hard way. I loathe to leave him in their care but he'd always been their favorite anyway.
I entered my room, and sat for a while, staring at the bread basket serving as a letter holder. It was to the top and I counted 23. That's funny, I think, because I didn't know that many damn people who'd bother to write.

'You were the most amazing girl...'
      'How have things been?'
  'Well, me and her broke up'
        'Really wish you were here'
      'I'm engaged'
            'It isn't that you weren't enough,
  I just didn't feel complete with you'

(Sincerely,      You)
                    Funny thing is I didn't feel complete with me either.

I burn every single letter, the ones I didn't open, which is an estimate of 22. Then I drive to Joe's house, and no, that's not really his name, but what's the point of telling the truth as I haven't up til this point.  I always loved taking the corner of his house fast because at just the right speed, I feel out of control. I parked in my usual spot on the corner, because no wants me to be seen here, and slip in his window, and it's always unlocked because our expectations are the same.
He greets with a frigid half smile. I wave the fag. The sex, it's good. There are moments I like it.
Moments where the pressure of folding under waves of empty pleasure is too typical.

    "I do love you, you know,"
and I give a half mumble and the sad thing is, I think he thinks he means it.

All I wanted was someone to say you're not a smoker but the fire.
You're destructive in your divine right.
But I was the one to stare myself in the face saying it.
I just wanted someone to tell me to come outside and kinda give that awkward laugh.
To just sit with me in the  sleepless nights and talk to me about trivial things.
I have the prescription to do that. I dream in fits of black but I don't see faces anymore.
And then when I actually have to look in the mirror, it's blurry, so it feels great.
Because then, I can't see just really how absolutely mad I've become. 







(In the end, it's all lies and bullshit. If I was fag toting, I would be filling myself with all
kinds of smoke so I don't just fly away.)

(2. I, himalaya



  • you are wrong,
    i am not the sounds of heat light and pain
    but the waves and leaves and mute.

    you paint me violent and uncompromising even while I have silenced my wick
    and watched your lips snore into sleep, I am untouched by your hands,
    I am small simple speech when I am loving you,
    I am intangible monsoon when I am passionate,
    I am better feral when I am alone,
    and unfolding limbs like sex and ornamentation like floral and subversive
    in your calumnious nectar. I am ashamed into the depths of your syllables.

    I am not the sounds of heat weight and pain
    but the waves of leaves and mute, you are wrong
    when you no longer caress my flesh as your canvas or form words improperly.

    Inviolable. I now hum.