Anne Barngrover

Coming Back to the Home I Made for the Woman I am Now

Here, I know the white dogwood

the redbud

the sleet-bright fences

fields tasseled in living gold.

I have driven down these fields

ones that look the same until you notice

they are not, the matted fur and bone crunch

of possum and deer, picked to their meat

by turkey buzzards, our school’s mascot.

See their flocks blackening the sky.

See them circle the hills beyond hills

a blood-dark spiral.

Everything here reminds me

of the way I wept into my palms

with a coat on my lap, the thigh-

clench chill of wrought-iron stairs

where I gave way  after running through snow

purse-swinging

knife-breathing

from the town bar.  I became all over again

a crumpled girl-thing in a world

of hairy wrists and loud-mouthed desires.

I let you count the hungry whites of my ribs

feel the aching push of my lungs

gather to a wailing bouquet

all the veins of my skinless body.

These days, you are the cobwebs

that crowd my path

the hound-dog ghost that drags

along my ankles in the mud.

One day I will kick you to the highway

and I will laugh

when you are struck, burst

and splattered

among the animal shit and scrabble weed

dirt for buzzards and criminals to clean.

Thrust of the road, I will run you down

over and over and over again

till you won’t look like you

till you won’t look like anything

but something that has been hated for so long.

And perhaps the day will come

when I have grown old and summoned

the curling softness hidden somewhere

inside of me, and perhaps then I will come back here

kneel beside you, and O—

I will gather the strength to touch you finally

till my fingers stain

forgive your clotted pieces rotting

into cigarette butts and dead tires in the mud.

But for now

this is the place where I will return.

I take my coffee, touch the fences and trees

lift my eyes to a sky spinning with turkey buzzards

dark and bald and beautiful.

They watch over me

as I drive down these old fields once more.

Today, they are bright

with the yellowing estrogen

of summer.

The Living

These days I go places just to say

I have gone. The train takes me from Prague

to Kutna Hora to a church made of human bones.

I press my forehead against the window and breathe

out a small fog.  A girl pokes her tongue at me.

Her face is an imp’s. Her eyes are the color of a scab.

There’s the legend of a half-blind monk

gone mad who summoned the dead

from a dump of earth, unmarked by plague.

How he stacked their parts into a geometry.

How he created a chandelier out of every bone

in the human body save for the smallest ones

found deep within the inner ear.

This I had expected: ribs and femurs,

shoulders and knees, chalk-dry and decorated

into crosses, roof draping and family crests;

finger bones spelling scripture; skulls heaped

into corners behind metal bar.  Again, I find myself alone.

I dreamt last night I awoke with an infection

that left me sterile.  “You’ll just have to deal with it,”

my dream-mother told me then, huffing a sigh.

She, who in real life plotted her reproduction

like a spreadsheet, when she would meet my father,

have me.  And in my dream I couldn’t stop screaming,

curling tighter, kicking things away.  A worry

has burrowed deep within me like a bloodspot.  I wish

I could reach out to a bone nailed to the wall, wish I could

cradle a skull in my palm. I miss that sober touch like an ache

at the back of my jaw. And yet, I see myself one day

in a place far from here. There I myself will baptize

a dark-haired baby the first day she is alive.

I will marvel at the artwork of her body. I will

blow my breath into the tiniest bones, the ones he left out

of the chandelier, bones of her inner ear,

the ones hidden even from God.

Meteor Shower

For a moment we believe:

Rush to the back deck,

Grip wood curling like soap,

And squint into the sky wedged

Between the sagging fronds

Of a browning banana tree.

I wear slippers knit by the girl

Before me, and your pajama pants

Slung loose at my hipbones.

The night is a sponge bath.

A pumpkin softens at our feet.

We hope to see meteors falling

The way I’ve hoped for snow,

Spring, autumn, even in places

That can’t hold these promises.

We peel back the night’s skin,

Strip clouds like fat from meat,

Seeking brightness, seeking it bald.

The oaks are green the color of velvet;

Spanish moss shimmers on branches

and wires, on us if we keep too still.

Only light the kitchen light.

Only sound the washing machine.

I breathe detergent and rotting orange rind.

I want to believe in us for longer than this—

Want to remember you smelling

Like rain on a night that never rained,

Your body earthed against white sheets,

Colored a dozen shades of brown.

Once we woke to an owl crying in the oak trees.

Once I woke to you kissing me I’m sorry, I’m sorry.

For a while all of our love was making up,

And when I held you, palms pressed

To ribs lips to chest your hands gathering

My hair like rosaries and your breath

Crashing into my eardrum, I swear

My teeth chattered and my skin

Trembled with enough hurt

To rock this body out to sea,

To explode across the Milky Way

And dizzy up the galaxy for good.

Then every night, you’ll have to seek me.

For you, I will break open

into a thousand fleets of light:

My body curved, a crescent moon,

And my heart purpled yet waking,

a wildflower named for the shooting star.

Anne Barngrover is currently teaching and working on her MFA in Creative Writing at Florida State University in Tallahassee, a city further south than the Deep South.  She is originally from Cincinnati, Ohio.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Promote. Poetry.
Share