Digging around, what did she find?
A box of worms?
The apple hadn’t bruised yet,
falling from the tree like a slow tear drop.
Did she find a graveyard? Arteries like tunnels?
There was a well,
but the bucket couldn’t reach the bottom;
even her arms grew tired
trying to reach it.
The vines growing on her body
were fed by that same well.
She pulled them at night
half-dreaming, eyes half-closed, half-staring;
they regarded me like tentacle-arms.
I kissed the apple from her empty lips,
clawed myself back into the shape of a rock:
watching the wind rake the leaves
and regarding, like Moses-arms, staff raised high,
her great body of water
erupting, exposed, and split apart
erotic and final.
There flew from the crevasses of her tongue
a squalling, slow, nomadic notion.
Bird-like, it reached out and felt for the ground.
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