Fragile


The black bowl of sky overturned in the water

at our ankles.  Though it seemed we could stand

on its gin-clear reflection, our feet swirled


up sands, blotting the starsthen we were only

two women with pants hiked up

in the muddy shallows, dirt rings


in our ears, the smell of fins and gutted

fish on our hands, the layered sediment of making

a livingthat night I found your arms


had hardened like mine, your eyes turned the harsh 

blue of spiked fins.  And I couldn't hide

inside my clothes, my body.  Even my palm


was a way in, a kitchen knife wound healed

on my hand, stitched together like a mouth 

that wants to be open.  I want to ask, Will I leave 


anything of worth behind, besides you?  

Carved ivory candleholders, table settings straight

from the silversmith, precious lotions rubbed


rosy into the complexion: some women inherit

these makings of a rich life, but we

have to steal them.  We stood on the sky's fragile


reflection that night.  No one saw us.  When we 

kissed, it was a bond made of nothing: one breath 

gripped in the fists of our lungs.


Appeared in Poet Lore in 2005.