Gods of August (II)
You who can hear but never see us, see what you’ve done: grow up deep
in Alabama long enough, and there’s no difference between a body
mounted above an altar or a mantle. One hangs on a cross, the other
on a plaque; one says let me save you, the other leave me save yourself:
so you’re lying in bed at the end of the day, and something is standing
on your chest, testing you like a mattress, maybe even thought about
getting rid of you the same way: dump you where they can’t see you
from the house and won’t care from the road. Save me dear Lord take
and make me of anything but body I pray dear Lord please— here, this is
the truth about how I know you’d rather die again than kill for us
once: in another life, I was my father in the truck cab the day
the blacktail buck hauled hard through the windshield;
it was my face my father’s father laid his hand to like a bannister,
held me out of the way as he reached through shattered glass
and thrashing legs for the pistol he aimed like answer, fired away
at the chest like his own: heaving as though housing a burning church.
Song for My Sister’s Body
—Louise Glück
The most famous Laura Foster in the world is the punchline
to the song about her lover who murdered her: Laura Foster “falls
into the wider genre of Appalachian sweetheart murder ballads“
the way anyone else falls in love or a ditch: silence, then thud. Play it
again, and she’s never not dying all over again—; October,
and we’re driving real late at night, my Laura and I, bridge lights over
the river touching us like seasons, like prayers without words
as we cross through; every flicker, another flash of her riding shotgun,
my Laura who wants to burn until she is whatever will never burn
again, wants a heart like an iron hammer. Laura wants to live like water
lives: fast as it is bright when nothing’s trapping, holding it back;
what I mean is, my Laura Foster would’ve beaten, pulped, caved
that motherfucker’s face in with a brick, then used it to dig him
a grave thin enough for dogs to claw up, if ever he tried to touch her;
Laura, lungs like mason jars thick with light; Laura, made of the blue
where fire comes from, the first memory of smoke; how, before I can
remember anything, I remember Laura, my laurel tree, my Daphne;
which means, before I can, I remember her, a clean pink star, wool-puffed,
crib-cupped; they say she was carrying a child, Laura Foster, say
she couldn’t have seen more than a flash as he stabbed, dumped her,
and walked out of the woods as though waking from an old dream;
how my Laura turns in sleep, wakes long enough to shovel her teeth
from her head in her dreams; Laura, my hand running through her hair
as through a velvet curtain of dark water as we drive home; how in sleep
she remembers falling out of bed as a child, remembers silence, then
thud; how she turns away, touches her face like a staircase railing, gently
only at first; listen, you’re not seeing this. I barely can, and I’m here:
Hang your head, Tom Dooley. Get fucked, Tom Dooley. Hang your head
and cry/ Killed poor Laura Foster. She’s trying to close her eyes,
my Laura, telling the joke where smoke is the punchline fire tells wood:
her hand in mine. It must be real cold in that earth, I think, maybe, just
maybe, not unlike the time Daddy ordered 50 cubic yards of black mulch;
surely not unlike how Laura and I tunneled into that mulch, each of us
trying, imagining we’d find the other’s soft body— burial: like sleeping in
the guts of a tree like lying deep in the guts of the sky, death: like being anything
God once saw fit to cut clear-away from everything once worth saving.
—for LM