Towards the Mouth of the River
triangles of blue on my face:
the fins of a salmon dying between
two rocks
//
light is my grandmother
closing her hands
pleading in air
thicker near the water
//
I’m a doe in my mother’s house
the water covering my hind legs completely
I drink from the deep end
of her body
//
I turn back into a river when I leave
step onto the porch
flood the yard
water never forgets
it’s water
//
whirling disease causes
some trout to chase their own tails
before they die
the fish disappearing
into little orange orbs
//
I’m circling this graveyard afraid
to walk the gravel road between the stones
//
I tell the light
of summers it left me quiet
holding a wound under a rusted faucet
“Towards the Mouth of the River” first appeared in American Poetry Review (APR).