I wake up unwashed
with two rubber bands on my wrist,
extras for you in case
yours break and you go back to
picking away at yourself.
You drive us to the next town.
You pack no bags.
Erica Road is lined with foliage,
the kind you don’t see on the east
coast this time of year. As the
clouds part over the bay, we sing
like God is coming
home with us.
You bump the car too hard
into the curb
in a fit of frustration.
The front-right wheel well
skitters on the pavement.
My anger is just enamel.
You keep scraping me.
You tell me you want seven children;
that I am special, if not important;
that everything is God;
that I am a safe love,
a good love,
if not a great one.
I paint your sentences onto smaller birds,
the migrating kind.
Still, I keep house:
I think of buying yellow tulips and
sending mail back home.
I walk the slow, careful paths around your
neighborhood until I grow so sick of them
I cannot speak.
Two nights, we go out to dinner.
You wear both of your good
dress shirts. One is bright red.
I wear all white.
I’ve planned on doing so.
This way, when I retell the story
I might seem sacrificial, prepared —
innocuous.
We drive to the airport.
It’s the first rainy day
since I’ve been here,
six days beyond my welcome.
My hand cramps when you grasp it,
a softness withering in my lap.
I won’t move away.
From the car, you watch me
try to leave you.
I waste four minutes at
a broken ticket machine.
Only when I relent,
turning back to your negative,
do you sit up in the
driver’s seat and recede into
the foggy line of piecemeal natives.
Once, in the spring,
it rained all day and you
held me as I shivered and
I wished more than anything
to fit into you
for as long as I could.