Apostrophe

See, now You are finally offstage where we can talk.

I can’t see through the drapes and pulleys, it’s too dark
for me to turn them into moss and oaks, too dark

for me to blink wooden risers into a bayou beautiful
in near collapse that once ran a monstrous river into the Gulf,

a scorched stew powerful only in sufficient stillness.
No monstrance, no milagro, no brown scapular scraps,

not even a woven palm frond. Just You and me.
Just me, actually, standing with hip cocked and three

fingers resting on my chin. Not even a naked
household goddess above my bed where I ache

and ache. I hate the Greeks, those bastards, for figuring
You into some kind of flesh—though that cure

is just a start. And the Romans tried, but flesh
must do more than die: it has to live. And here’s what’s next.

Me talking to You in Your most present absence,
without even an apophatic clue. I imagine

Your holy knees gathered to Your chin and Your arms
bound twice around your legs. I imagine Your heart

in a corner beating while You listen to my footfalls
circle from the best damn hiding place of all.

Source: Poetry (May 2019)