1.
After the fugue, only echoes
from a fluted plain.
Dragon scales like plucked stars
glimmer on the sill
from where the boats docked
and sailed.
2.
Fireworks fizzle in the silver waves.
I examine the expanse left for us:
stars. You had said we were meant to be
walking among them,
a flux of us like milk streams
pouring across the sky.
But here on this windswept
ledge of land, no footprints.
Just armies of ghosts
ferrying the coast
with a flourish of sparklers
and flags, bracelets of trade beads
flung to the shore
my restless waves hum over.
3.
Sweet Chariot – I also sang
as your bones were drained.
Platelets of seedlings
compressed into jars, cyclones
sketched onto screens.
You had said they were meant to be
swirled into my blood. The songs.
The interior map of the seed.
Only a conch shell remains.
Tattered pigeons
roosting in a shopping cart,
the rusted tin of a Texaco star
jutting upwards from the sand,
refrigerator stocked
with Pegasus gas cans
framing the blue hands of the sea.
4.
Who named the map of you as “vanishing”?
Who cut the sandstone tablet
then engraved your secrets there?
Traitor, your seeds have been stolen.
The encodings inside them
transcribed. Forgot.
5.
Because you have no burial place, I stand
in the mirage that marks you: a smoke tree
billowing from splintered mud.
I trace your alluvial face in the sand,
twine your wing with reed grass –
on the breast of a lava stone
weave you a nest
out of saltbush branches,
bread crusts, blood.
6.
Beneath the patchwork
quilt of your deathbed: dunes.
Shutters of the rotting lighthouse
flap open in the wind.
Behind me ashen fields,
names that have burned in them.
7.
They carried us in cedar caskets. Marched in droves to beaches. Like crabs they fastened tin to their backs. I recorded their stacks of maps and clocks; car scraps, tire swings, smashed and rusted airplane wings; the last cans of tuna fish, jelly jars, Kodak film, batteries –
they rigged a radio
from electrical debris,
sewed our skin into sails.
8.
I remember the afternoon
it arrived – the tempest
that tore the roots
from their holding.
In emboldened winds,
rooftops lifted.
Fires swept the plains.
Highways loosed
their soot-black ribbons.
I tracked the burnt-out
stars on pavement,
flat on their backs, black
shadows of leaves.
The last of the oil lamp
dims – a passage
clenches
open: