Corpus

When you finish burning, what’s left 
sends a black thread of smoke
through fresh ash like a hand
waving the last of us away.
You didn’t ask to return,
if you did, God never answered,
passing your request to some minor deity,
some lesser bird of paradise.
Nonetheless, you’re here,
your body the shape of a milk snake,
whale shark, dust devil—
something only appearing to be dangerous.
Alive, we knew you as a closed door,
the sound of crushed gravel, a truck
backing down the drive. For how long
did I mistake you for night,
a dog’s bark, an owl?
Now, we’ve packed up cold cuts,
hung dress clothes, and didn’t sing.
We drink whisky in the backyard,
though we’d rather sleep.
But still, here you are, failed storm,
waterspout, empty threat that’s not quite done with us.

 
Cindy King

Cindy King is the author of a full-length poetry collection, Zoonotic (Tinderbox Editions), and two poetry chapbooks, Lesser Birds of Paradise (Southeastern Louisiana State University Press) and Easy Street (Dancing Girl Press). Her work has appeared in The Threepenny Review, The Sun, Cincinnati Review, Callaloo, Gettysburg Review, Prairie Schooner, and elsewhere. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, she currently lives in Utah, where she is an associate professor of creative writing at Utah Tech University and editor of The Southern Quill and Route 7 Review. She is an editorial associate at Seneca Review and enjoys serving on the artistic board for the Blank Theatre in Hollywood, California, where she screens scripts for their Living Room Series.

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