The Potomac - Poetry and Politics - Jen Michalski
May 2008 - THE POTOMAC



Bitter Clean Dirt
   Jen Michalski

It’s cold and smells of horses. I reach for Emma’s broken bit, my knuckles red gumballs on hands that will not close. This is where the chill separates an untucked shirt from an oblique and cuts it right across. Everything, from the ground to the sky to the barn to the house, is a faded tintype, a wheat palette, even the smells. Bitter clean dirt.

She is still in bed, her body a fold of sheet. I cover her like a blanket.  It’s not a sickness of her body. It’s the head. The wind rattles against the window, and we both search the drained landscape with different eyes. I have dirt deep under my fingernails. I have broken more bones than bread, than hearts. I love her. I fear her. I miss her. There are more feelings than words that travel the roads of me.

“Get up,” I whisper in her neck, my stubble leaving little abrasions.  “Lots to get done. Come on, now.”

  
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