didn’t you rip down the front-porch-lavender?
the roots could not resist your blunted claws.
you left the soil all ravaged and ruptured drenched with
sweat and your vaguely-oriental musk
like the crows gorging in the undivided fields
at the far-end of summer and severed cornstalks
everywhere.
didn’t you stand on the threshold before the vicar
your face smeared with powder and dad’s cologne
sheepish like a milkless cow?
and when motherhood began didn’t you rise thigh-deep
in soiled water, with seams split unearthed,
stitches undone, loose at your knees, cracked-lipped
and laughing amazement at the animal you had become?



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