Brine-Blue
i. pulled a fish out of my chest salted brine-blue scaled and dangling tail broke my ribs, emptied the rest out came pouring seawater spines dredged muskgrass and tangled kelp lines left foam and silt and suds crusted ‘cross my stomach seabed finally the waves crash a’coast linoleum, piano, cushion, remote, heavy outside now. ii. so much lighter without my seawater in this sun a picnic against a clear window cold world reaching up, in cliffs fjords of wind, I could walk in I could drift, take flight soar and fall and twirl bright black kite a streak through clouds and prism knives iii. I thought I’d carry ocean to the earth underneath only let it spill when my walls of skins rotted enough for the fins to surf dead grave-dirt instead I pulled this fish out of my throat thorax thrashed against gills to drain my lungs from maritime guilts. drag my fingers ‘gainst the bottom dredging silt and sediments black the color of the bottom of the basins leaking from my nails to fingertips suck on black but it doesn’t taste like tears anymore the salt’s less the wound of what i lack more sediment than equatorial current. gone is the reaching grasping foam up my tongue rising tide to my teeth. No. no more all that’s left is soft sand, found in ponds and black rock beaches. iv. and all the oceans that fell to the floor? I don’t worry about flood. Someday, the fish in my hands, cradled, cupped, will look back at me up from the clouds –an eye in the sunset, lavender and dandelion reaching over brine-blue. v. I think this was I know this was long long overdue.