X-Ray Prophets
These days, you need a machete—
Crocodile Dundee big—
to hack a vein through this jungle of dark.
How does anyone sleep?
Once, young and feral,
I could sleep through thunder,
through houses collapsing in dreams.
Now arthritis tolls its iron bell;
pain sits on the porch with a shotgun.
I turn and turn,
a stranded animal nosing the brush
for one patch of moss,
one warm stone of bliss
inside the swamp-thick doubt
that anything changes.
Maybe it does.
But when strangers climb into my skull
with flashlights and weather maps,
I leave.
No shelter from X-ray prophets
mistaking roots for bones,
blind to the green fire
rising beneath the soil.
The phone hums in my hand
like a tagged hornet.
The zombies know our names,
know the shape of our hunger.
Still, sight is a prescription bottle
with half the label scratched away;
speech, a window breathing itself opaque.
Trust half of seeing,
none of the static.
Believe in a cracked lantern
swinging through rain.
The crow, stitched to the power line.
The thorn, working deeper under the skin.
Pennies dissolving on the tongue
like blood and electricity.
Or the smoke of
black orchids opening
where the dark learns to flower.