Affair

by Ash Durrance

 

No one tells you that the heart makes foul meat.

Or that to be young is to be gold-spun by whiskey and lust:

a married man, my dorm room, and rain falling into fangs on the street

 

where weeks before I’d been struck by a car and flown like a sheet.

On my bed the man’s body was a lie I told myself to trust,

his mouth a rim of pink glass lightning leaves when it strikes 

 

and when he called my name, a double drumbeat

to the wall, the vowels clung to the copper pipes like rust

and I felt beyond the brick, across the courtyard, the concrete

 

simmer and knew as the cannibals do what it is to feast.

Isn’t there always power in things most unjust?

He was a bird whose legs were ropes strung across a fishing fleet 

 

and the day’s thin cloth was a sail my sorrow soon would crease.

I want fragrant petals, gunmetal, and lime to crush

between my teeth, and a wild boar skinned of her red meat

to climb into before I cross another busy, panting street.

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