tectonic, and nothing else
this suffocation has
followed me from the
shoreline. these instincts
are primal, are endless
urges to claw new faces
into the mountainsides
just to feel the earth
underneath my fingernails.
the peaks rise up like
wisdom i'll never grasp,
ancient in all their
indifference. the mist
doesn't choke them like
it does me, and it proves
that no matter where i
flee, all that i left behind
has already infected this
side of my skin. a bounty
on my head; a death
wish if i slow down. this
late-june loneliness, this
summer-solstice emptiness
hollows out my ribcage
and nests where i am
too afraid to reach
inside and dig. unfiltered
sunbeams make me passive—
and that's just another
failed metaphor for the ache
to redeem myself to
him. i see mother earth
painted soft in the distance;
i see the color leave
my skin in the mirror
and eventually, the miles
tinge me blue like the rest
of appalachia. there's no
crown for the first to the top.
there's no gilded throne
for the conquerer. the
peaks hold their territory
tight with their millennia
and i am too young,
too young, too ephemeral.
too buried in the back of a
long-collapsed mine shaft.
(the emeralds wink at
me from my grave—they
tell me my bones will
fuse with these outstretched
hands of rock and
that if i will be remembered
for anything, it will be for
how they will unearth me
in a hundred, a thousand
years and find my skeleton
still crying out apologies
to my mother.)