lifeline

wedged in the top branches, rain still sighing
            to earth as a dissolute sky dissolves,
a mozambican woman turns mother,
            her water breaking loose to pool with the flood
 
licking the trunk below, a country-sized
            puddle calls forth the child whose name, the mother
vowed, would not be drowned, no matter how
            high she had to climb. my mother’s water
 
washed her bare yellow bathroom tile many
            years ago, a diluvial warning
of my struggle to arrive. we fought to
            get me out, and have been tugging at each
 
other ever since, tethered by a cord
            that simply thickens when it’s cut. we
descended then, thirsting, churning, not into
            the waters that hound the mozambican
 
mother, baying her and her baby in
            the tree, but into that enduring ocean
in whichas mother, daughter, or botha
            woman’s only choices are drink or swim.

Copyright Credit: Evie Shockley, “lifeline” from a half-red sea. Copyright © 2006 by Evie Shockley, published by Carolina Wren Press. Reprinted by permission of Evie Shockley.
Source: a half-red sea (Carolina Wren Press, 2006)