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A poem about claustrophobic intimacy and the collapsing of two individuals into one unit. |
Fishtank Earth-heavy, dry as parchment, cracked tongue and stiff lids, we drag, we wake—we dream. Her hallway becomes a giant fish tank. He’s been gone long enough for her to throw away the red and gold bedspread (she never liked it in the first place), gaudy and used and never clean, for bills and plastic dishware to pile up next to an oven that turns out meals for one. Long enough to feel alone. I cannot blame them. Can you blame them? She just wants to touch him with innocent ears and clean hands, without the world always— Gulb, gulb, gulp…choke on it. Shadowy ripples, sand is not solid ground— constancy, constantly. Gone. Is he the one tapping outside the glass, long-fingered and puffy cheeks, contorted circus face—or suffocating within, tangled among plastic weeds and artificial rocks that look like kneecaps under snow? She is alone. He is one. Without eyes that look past hers, without lips that yell “You cunt”— and she feels the hot handprint across her cheek, skin pulsing under a touch that’s harder and warmer than she wants. His bed is cold. She wants to scream, something loud and indefinite, shapeless, formless, trees-without- bark words—something like something. My heart, my heart my heart hurts. If I could tell you how hot his tears were, salty and translucent, when they hit her bare arm. (She looks dewy and pink.) If I could only tell you what they felt—cold knife in the gut—when everything started to…when it… And he loves her, twisting the leaf-printed sheets around his leg at night and eating words. If I could, if I—I would scream. He got tired of yelling. Will he leak in through the cracks in the door and overtake her? Barricade it. My lips are a moat. Hand over mouth—but not air-tight, never tight enough to keep it all in when she needs it. Pursed lips and wet fingers, white slippered feet, finned feet. Profanities echo up the stairwell, empty—like a barren womb, the knot in her stomach, the lump in his hot throat, like when he said “I love you.” Bubbling and rising—green and liquid, like the color of Neptune’s hair or his eyes only darker. In a fish tank where our lungs are on the outside, and fall apart—brittle as waterlogged sticks. We are fleshy and grotesque like a baby in the blue. She is crying without tears, he is. Lizard-like without the gills, scaly and wet, in need of sun. Tongue reflexes, flicks in and out Out-in, out-in, out… The crack in her window leaks out air like a sieve and brings in tomorrow and coldness, cold water that liquefies her stomach—gelatin and acid. They only feel awake when they swim. (But they can’t.) We killed each other. Drain out the tub, plastic-plugged and contained. Touch land with hollow feet and— Breathe. |