
Photo by Robert Hrovat on Unsplash
Shades of Red
color
came to me suddenly
not blood, but red, reddish
and burning. Only
at first abrupt,
like a punch line, a
jawbone or
hallway carved
round,
a rib cage
to hold my breath
the red
staining,
marking a
detour, around
feeling
around terror, a quick sidestep.
It startled me. How
easy it is to turn,
away. I layer
the colors, fold their
sharp acoustics
and breathe, bend,
a hand across both eyes
retinas shielded
from the red,
red sun
Indigo, Turmeric
in my chest
rests a
hard hollow ache for
the full
bleed soak of
ochre ink I
can almost taste
the seep
now blue each
vein a cracked
arc through
midnight’s dark
glow of indigo a
glint against
each turmeric
bloom
another
world in
other words
time’s
aperture
opening wide to
stars and
moons
yellow
bursting, and blue
Out of Nowhere
She said they came out of nowhere traveling too fast east on Washington Wednesday morning before we’d eaten our eggs or buttoned up against the facts and numbers, unaware of the statistically known, the seven per day. I cracked the shells and the yellow yolks tumbled out like soft exclamations as I picked up the phone, heard her crying and remembered how easy it is to lose, not to be lost, not to forget where you are or where you’re going, but just like that to find the yolk punctured and running all over the pan.