One of us is still alive and will prove it.

I think of all the fucking 
I would not have done 
if my father had lived 

and I rush to bury him again. 
This time I’m wearing a skirt, 
both my hands filled with soil. 

I throw it like confetti into the gaping
earth of his grave. Here I am: alive,
daughter of a godly man, 

dutiful as an anchor, 
I would have married a godly man, too,
to please him who I loved so much 

I kept his name, 
made it the cleanest part 
of what he would have named: 

dirty. Ask me where I’m going tonight.
I was a child: unbleeding 
in my white cotton. 

The seed of what has become all this urgent
want was there when we burned him. 

I am like that sometimes: heat 
where should be comfort; gone 
where should be calm, dead 
where one might think my smile belongs. 

Sometimes I am synapse: 
alive only in connection. 
I think of all the bodies 
and return to the one I love 

most. I am a gift 
my father gave to me. 

His carcass, a dowry 
that I might marry myself 
as a nun marries and uses 
the idea of a god to justify it. 

I am in the bed 
alone, on the couch 
alone, on the floor 
alone. If we are fucking, I am 
the only god in the room.

—Nicole Homer (Blackbird: an online journal of literature and the arts)

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