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In: Anthology

Tender Crow’s Feet – J.K. Anowe

 

          because it holds the rest of the world    like a secret
in the sense that when      you pass through one
every eye is   looking but untelling              we name
it after a lineage―to come from a pedigree    of women
          who never enjoyed the sex but moaned anyway
i know a girl in the scene  of the dream―a collector  a nudist
                   a latebloomer of sorts                running a forefinger over the index
of a facade to the outer corners of my eyes     as though it is hers to unscuplt
          as if to say―i’ll always see you as an answer…       barefeet       we circumvent
the collarbone of the night         like slowdance        without holding hands
stopping every now & then to adjust our shadows    like loincloths
i―with a bottle of valium  she―the corkscrew until we arrive inside
ourselves & trigger the tripwire―a new artform showing how quick
we willingly default to self-destruct       how but for one     she exhumes all of my birth
marks & mental disorders till her feet begins to hurt  the masochism evident
with every footfall  every fingering of the stigma      where the flower begins its bloom…
could we have known      language to be a thing     for the lost [insert question
mark] ask the men at babel         no one knows how burdening it is        waiting on the
universe to take      your mother by her          maiden name         so you could grow
the nerve to complete       the taking of your own life          because like touching your
self in pagan places suicide is but one void telling another―now i
must leave this body    & return from you     denying residues of god
family & love                   full custody  hence we are quiet enough to be sudden         to be
nothing until we mishappen…   but what category of disaster is a body      is a
country being             what is it they say about dancing into your own story      without soles
or nakedness as fireproof  lord knows he let us come          this far just so we
could feel us come apart   steadfast in slow [loco]motion    like rollercoaster
passengers on a downward spiral while the country where bullets pass
through every city like ghosts mistaking bodies for air         this city in retrospect
of our wildly truant bones          chased our gust of ghosts
from prairie to pavement the girl saying―      you’re falling again
as the sand beneath my feet                 starts to quicken


J.K. Anowe, Nigerian-born poet, is the recipient of the inaugural Brittle Paper Award for Poetry in 2017. His chapbook, The Fracturing, is forthcoming from Madhouse Press in 2019. He lives, and writes from somewhere in Nigeria.