Here you are in the straw house, feeding ice to the dog, and you wanted
   an adventure, so I said Have an adventure.
   The straw about to burn, the straw on fire. Here you are on the TV,
   saying Watch me, just watch me.
   2
   Four dreams in a row, four dreams in a row, four dreams in a row,
   fall down right there. I wanted to fall down right there but I knew
   you wouldn't catch me because you're dead. I swallowed crushed ice
   pretending it was glass and you're dead. Ashes to ashes.
   You wanted to be cremated so we cremated you and you wanted an adventure
   so I ran and I knew you wouldn't catch me.
   You are a fever I am learning to live with, and everything is happening
   at the wrong end of a very long tunnel.
   3
   I woke up in the morning and I didn't want anything, didn't do anything,
   couldn't do it anyway,
   just lay there listening to the blood rush through me and it never made
   any sense, anything.
   And I can't eat, can't sleep, can't sit still or fix things and I wake up and I
   wake up and you're still dead, you're under the table, you're still feeding
   the damn dog, you're cutting the room in half.
   Whatever. Feed him whatever. Burn the straw house down.
   4
   I don't really blame you for being dead but you can't have your sweater back.
   So, I said, now that we have our dead, what are we going to do with them?
   There's a black dog and there's a white dog, depends on which you feed,
   depends on which damn dog you live with.
   5
   Here we are
   in the wrong tunnel, burn O burn, but it's cold, I have clothes
   all over my body, and it's raining, it wasn't supposed to. And there's snow
   on the TV, a landscape full of snow, falling from the fire-colored sky.
   But thanks, thanks for calling it the blue sky
   You can sleep now, you said. You can sleep now. You said that.
   I had a dream where you said that. Thanks for saying that.
   You weren't supposed to.
   Saying Your Names
   Chemical names, bird names, names of fire
   and flight and snow, baby names, paint names,
   delicate names like bones in the body,
   Rumplestiltskin names that are always changing,
   names that no one’s ever able to figure out.
   Names of spells and names of hexes, names
   cursed quietly under the breath, or called out
   loudly to fill the yard, calling you inside again,
   calling you home. Nicknames and pet names
   and baroque French monikers, written in
   shorthand, written in longhand, scrawled
   illegibly in brown ink on the backs of yellowing
   photographs, or embossed on envelopes lined
   with gold. Names called out across the water,
   names I called you behind your back,
   sour and delicious, secret and unrepeatable,
   the names of flowers that open only once,
   shouted from balconies, shouted from rooftops,
   or muffled by pillows, or whispered in sleep,
   or caught in the throat like a lump of meat.
   I try, I do. I try and try. A happy ending?
   Sure enough — Hello darling, welcome home.
   I’ll call you darling, hold you tight. We are
   not traitors but the lights go out. It’s dark.
   Sweetheart, is that you? There are no tears,
   no pictures of him squarely. A seaside framed
   in glass, and boats, those little boats with
   sails aflutter, shining lights upon the water,
   lights that splinter when they hit the pier.
   His voice on tape, his name on the envelope,
   the soft sound of a body falling off a bridge
   behind you, the body hardly even makes
   a sound. The waters of the dead, a clear road,
   every lover in the form of stars, the road
   blocked. All night I stretched my arms across
   him, rivers of blood, the dark woods, singing
   with all my skin and bone Please keep him safe.
   Let him lay his head on my chest and we will be
   like sailors, swimming in the sound of it, dashed
   to pieces. Makes a cathedral, him pressing against
   me, his lips at my neck, and yes, I do believe
   his mouth is heaven, his kisses falling over me
   like stars. Names of heat and names of light,
   names of collision in the dark, on the side of the
   bus, in the bark of the tree, in ballpoint pen
   on jeans and hands and the backs of matchbooks
   that then get lost. Names like pain cries, names
   like tombstones, names forgotten and reinvented,
   names forbidden or overused. Your name like
   a song I sing to myself, your name like a box
   where I keep my love, your name like a nest
   in the tree of love, your name like a boat in the
   sea of love — O now we’re in the sea of love!
   Your name like detergent in the washing machine.
   Your name like two X’s like punched-in eyes,
   like a drunk cartoon passed out in the gutter,
   your name with two X’s to mark the spots,
   to hold the place, to keep the treasure from
   becoming ever lost. I’m saying your name
   in the grocery store, I’m saying your name on
   the bridge at dawn. Your name like an animal
   covered with frost, your name like a music that’s
   been transposed, a suit of fur, a coat of mud,
   a kick in the pants, a lungful of glass, the sails
   in wind and the slap of waves on the hull
   of a boat that’s sinking to the sound of mermaids
   singing songs of love, and the tug of a simple
   profound sadness when it sounds so far away.
   Here is a map with a your name for a capital,
   here is an arrow to prove a point: we laugh
   and it pits the world against us, we laugh,
   and we’ve got nothing left to lose, and our hearts
   turn red, and the river rises like a barn on fire.
   I came to tell you, we’ll swim in the water, we’ll
   swim like something sparkling underneath
   the waves. Our bodies shivering, and the sound
   of our breathing, and the shore so far away.
   I’ll use my body like a ladder, climbing
   to the thing behind it, saying farewell to flesh,
   farewell to everything caught underfoot
   and flattened. Names of poisons, names of
   handguns, names of places we’ve been
   together, names of people we’d be together,
   Names of endurance, names of devotion,
   street names and place names and all the names
   of our dark heaven crackling in their pan.
   It’s a bed of straw, darling. It sure as shit is.
   If there was one thing I could save from the fire,
   he said, the broken arms of the sycamore,
   the eucalyptus still trying to climb out of the yard —
   your breath on my neck like a music that holds
   my hands down, kisses as they burn their way
   along my spine — or rain, our bodies wet,
   clothes clinging arm to elbow, clothes clinging
   nipple to groin — I’ll be right here. I’m waiting.
   Say hallelujah, say goodnight, say it over
   the canned music and your feet won’t stumble,
   his face getting larger, the rest blurring
   on every side. And angels, about t 
					     					 			welve angels,
   angels knocking on your head right now, hello
   hello, a flash in the sky, would you like to
   meet him there, in Heaven? Imagine a room,
   a sudden glow. Here is my hand, my heart,
   my throat, my wrist. Here are the illuminated
   cities at the center of me, and here is the center
   of me, which is a lake, which is a well that we
   can drink from, but I can’t go through with it.
   I just don’t want to die anymore.
   III
   Planet of Love
   Imagine this:
   You're driving.
   The sky's bright. You look great.
   In a word, in a phrase, it's a movie,
   you're the star.
   so smile for the camera, it's your big scene,
   you know your lines.
   I'm the director. I'm in a helicopter.
   I have a megaphone and you play along,
   because you want to die for love,
   you always have.
   Imagine this:
   You're pulling the car over. Somebody's waiting.
   You're going to die
   in your best friend's arms.
   And you play along because it's funny, because it's written down,
   you've memorized it,
   it's all you know.
   I say the phrases that keep it all going,
   and everybody plays along.
   Imagine:
   Someone's pulling a gun, and you're jumping into the middle of it.
   You didn't think you'd feel this way.
   There's a gun in your hand.
   It feels hot. It feels oily.
   I'm the director
   and i'm screaming at you,
   I'm waving my arms in the sky,
   and everyone's watching, everyone's
   curious, everyone's
   holding their breath.
   Wishbone
   You saved my life he says. I owe you everything.
   You don’t, I say, you don’t owe me squat, let’s just get going, let’s just
   get gone, but he’s relentless,
   keeps saying I owe you, says Your shoes are filling with your own
   damn blood, you must want something, just tell me, and it’s yours.
   But I can’t look at him, can hardly speak,
   I took the bullet for all the wrong reasons, I’d just as soon kill you myself,
   I say. You keep saying I owe you, I owe… but you say the same thing
   every time. Let’s not talk about it, let’s just not talk.
   Not because I don’t believe it, not because I want it any different, but I’m
   always saving and you’re always owing and I’m tired of asking to settle
   the debt. Don’t bother. You never mean it
   anyway, not really, and it only makes me that much more ashamed.
   There’s only one thing I want, don’t make me say it, just get me bandages,
   I’m bleeding, I’m not just making conversation.
   There’s smashed glass glittering everywhere like stars. It’s a Western,
   Henry. It’s a downright shoot-em-up. We’ve made a graveyard
   out of the bone white afternoon.
   It’s another wrong-man-dies scenario and we keep doing it, Henry,
   keep saying until we get it right… but we always win and we never quit.
   See, we’ve won again,
   here we are at the place where I get to beg for it where I get to say Please,
   for just one night, will you lay down next to me, we can leave our clothes on,
   we can stay all buttoned up?
   But we both know how it goes–– I say I want you inside me and you hold
   my head underwater, I say I want you inside me and you split me open
   with a knife.
   I’m battling monsters, I’m pulling you out of the burning buildings
   and you say I’ll give you anything but you never come through.
   Even when you’re standing up
   you look like you’re lying down, but will you let me kiss your neck, baby?
   Do I have to tie your arms down? Do I have to stick my tongue in your
   mouth like the hand of a thief,
   like a burglary, like it’s just another petty theft? It makes me tired,
   Henry. Do you see what I mean? Do you see what I’m getting at?
   I swear, I end up
   feeling empty, like you’ve taken something out of me, and I have to search
   my body for the scars, thinking Did he find that one last tender place to
   sink his teeth in?
   I know you want me to say it, Henry, it’s in the script, you want me to say
   Lie down on the bed, you’re all I ever wanted and worth dying for too...
   but I think I’d rather keep the bullet.
   It’s mine, see, I’m not giving it up. This way you still owe me, and that’s
   as good as anything. You can’t get out of this one, Henry, you can’t get it
   out of me, and with this bullet lodged in my chest,
   covered with your name, I will turn myself into a gun, because I’m hungry
   and hollow and just want something to call my own. I’ll be your
   slaughterhouse, your killing floor, your morgue
   and final resting, walking around with this bullet inside me like the bullet
   was already there, like it’s been waiting inside me the whole time.
   Do you want it? Do you want anything I have?
   Will you throw me to the ground like you mean it, reach inside and wrestle
   it out with your bare hands? If you love me, Henry, you don’t love me
   in a way I understand.
   Do you know how it ends? Do you feel lucky? Do you want to go home
   now? There’s a bottle of whiskey in the trunk of the Chevy and a
   dead man at our feet
   staring up at us like we’re something interesting. This is where the evening
   splits in half, Henry, love or death. Grab an end, pull hard,
   and make a wish.
   Driving, Not Washing
   It starts with bloodshed, always bloodshed, always the same
   running from something larger than yourself story,
   shoving money into the jaws of a suitcase, cutting your hair
   with a steak knife at a rest stop,
   and you're off, you're on the run, a fugitive driving away from
   something shameful and half-remembered.
   They're hurling their bodies down the freeway
   to the smell of gasoline,
   which is the sound of a voice saying I told you so.
   Yes, you did dear.
   Every story has its chapter in the desert, the long slide from kingdom
   to kingdom through the wilderness,
   where you learn things, where you're left to your own devices.
   Henry's driving,
   and Theodore's bleeding shotgun into the upholstery.
   It's a road movie,
   a double-feature, two boys striking out across America, while desire,
   like a monster, crawls up out of the lake
   with all of us watching, with all of us wondering if these two boys will
   find a way to figure it out.
   Here is the black box, the shut eye,
   the bullet pearling in his living skin. This boy, half-destroyed,
   screaming Drive into that tree, drive off the embankment.
   Henry, make something happen.
   But angels are pouring out of the farmland, angels are swarming
   over the grassland,
   Angels rising from their little dens, arms swinging, wings aflutter,
   dropping their white-hot bombs of love.
   We are not dirty, he keeps saying. We are not dirty...
   They want you to love the whole damn world but you won't,
   you want it all narrowed down to 
					     					 			 one fleshy man in the bath,
   who knows what to do with his body, with his hands.
   It should follow,
   you know this, like the panels of a comic strip,
   we should be belted in, but you still can't get beyond your skin,
   and they're trying to drive you into the ground, to see if anything
   walks away.
   Road Music
   1
   The eye stretches to the horizon and then must continue up.
   Anything past the horizon
   is invisible, it can only be imagined. You want to see the future but
   you only see the sky. Fluffy clouds.
   Look—white fluffy clouds.
   Looking back is easy for a while and then looking back gets
   murky. There is the road, and there is the story of where the road goes,
   and then more road,
   the roar of the freeway, the roar of the city sheening across the city.
   There should be a place.
   At the rest stop, in the restaurant, the overpass, the water's edge . . .
   2
   He was not dead yet, not exactly—
   parts of him were dead already, certainly other parts were still only waiting
   for something to happen, something grand, but it isn't
   always about me,
   he keeps saying, though he's talking about the only heart he knows—
   He could build a city. Has a certain capacity. There's a niche in his chest
   where a heart would fit perfectly
   and he thinks if he could just maneuver one into place—
   well then, game over.
   3
   You wonder what he's thinking when he shivers like that.
   What can you tell me, what could you possibly
   tell me? Sure, it's good to feel things, and if it hurts, we're doing it
   to ourselves, or so the saying goes, but there should be
   a different music here. There should be just one safe place
   in the world, I mean
   this world. People get hurt here. People fall down and stay down and I don't like
   the way the song goes.
   You, the moon. You, the road. You, the little flowers
   by the side of the road. You keep singing along to that song I hate. Stop singing.
   The Dislocated Room
   It was night for many miles and then the real stars in the purple sky,
   like little boats rowed out too far,
   begin to disappear.
   And there, in the distance, not the promised land,
   but a Holiday Inn,
   with bougainvillea growing through the chain link by the pool.