print previewback KAVEH AKBAR
Soot
Sometimes  God comes to earth disguised as rust,
chewing  away a chain link fence or mariner’s knife.
From up so close we must seem
clumsy  and gloomless, like new lovers
undressing in front of  each other
for the  first time. Regarding loss, I’m afraid
to keep it in the story,
worried what  I might bring back to life,
like the marble angel who woke to  find
his  innards scattered around his feet.
Blood from the belly tastes sweeter
than blood from anywhere else. We know this
but don’t know why—the woman  on TV
  dabs a man’s  gutwound with her hijab
  then draws the cloth to  her lips, confused.
  I keep  dreaming I’m a creature pulling out my claws
  one by one to sell in a market stall  next to stacks
  of  pomegranates and garden tools. It’s predictable,
  the logic of dreams. Long ago I  lived in Heaven
because  I wanted to. When I fell to earth
I knew the way—through  the soot, into the leaves.
  It still  took years. Upon landing, the ground
  embraced me sadly, with  the gentleness
of someone  delivering tragic news to a child.  ![]()
     Soot
     Portrait of The Alcoholic with Home Invader and Housefly
     Thirstiness is Not Equal
Division
   Against Memory
   What I Am Looking for Is What Is Looking