Desserts, by PATRICIA TRAXLER
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What is to be said, or needs to be,
for one who protected her own
nightmare, who buried
murmurs & bruises each morning
before the world was up? Secret,
this shame, even now
I keep it safe as a baby,
though I don’t doubt its paternity
Nor do I imagine
it was a virgin birth--let’s be serious:
I don’t believe in miracles
that hurt. But as to blame I can blame
no one for that love
baby, that thing that kept me
awake at night, screamed to be
fed till I killed it instead, killed it and still
It rises each morning like
light, like dough, dough
baby, lovebaby, cumbrous secret
on its tongue like Communion, a
terrible light in its eyes; fragile-boned
thing that needs me, needs and
needs, eats me alive, a finger, a toe
an ear at a time, but saves my red heart
For the end. For so long, all these years,
I’ve wanted to go back and say Watch out,
it’s a dangerous dessert : in dreams
there are warnings of how it will rise
stealthy as morning, my lollipop heart,
quite on its own it will rise up, monstrous,
intransigent, and beat, it will beat him
to within an inch of my life.
From “Forbidden Words” by Patricia Traxler. (Missouri: $9.95) 1994 Reprinted by permission.
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