Dreams Inside the Glass Case
As I heal, leisure falls around me like a dawn-gray glove.
My nails grow long and indolent, clicking along the nightstand
when I reach for water, any water. I drift out on pills
forget-me-not blue, temper their chalk with candied jellies
feeling how I imagine the rich do: cared for without apology.
The bed is a tomb where I pray for the lazarus day to
come quickly, flat on my back under cotton shrouds, pain
the little dog nipping at my heels. A certain kind of woman
is allowed to rest so I don her mask. When I slip under
a technicolor parade of gems moving through the dark.
Palm Oasis
Because I fear the mountain
I climb it, braced and trembling.
In every direction the rock pushing
slant from earth, spiked land laden
with cholla, creosote, joshua trees
keeping watch for fire and rain alike.
My steps press the dust, among
the millions of visitors, of years.
Life retreats behind dead growth when
season is harsh. No shade, no succor
ranges grazing the sun like hard knuckles
until day’s leave when the dusklight slips
into the oasis how an unzipped dress
falls from the shoulders of a beauty,
quiet pierced by revved engines because
this is America; even in wilds, it sins.
What sweetness in its sour belly,
these lands kept separate, for now.
Shriveled pomegranates rattle in wind
bells of the underworld.
How did I luck into so much
here at the end of everything.
Ann DeVilbiss (she/her) has work published or forthcoming in Appalachian Review, Columbia Journal, The Missouri Review, and elsewhere. She has received support from the Kentucky Arts Council and the Kentucky Foundation for Women. Her little book of spell poems, The Red Chorus, is available from White Stag Publishing. A founding member of the Sublimity City Poetry Collective, she lives and works in Louisville.
