What Swanplume Boy, through the Stall Floor,  
                                          Hears the Chorus from THE SOIL 
THE SOIL,                              Before we even knew how to pronounce murder, we wept over Abel’s stonebit  
RAIN-GLOSSED                      corpse. Our aquifers, even now, kiss his bones to opaldust. Trust we will sound
                                                      the same lament, build the same plumdark for you.
                                                                            They’ve plucked my feathers to famine. How now will he preen
 THE HAWKMOTH                       Hived in plagued heifers, we read the signs inscribed across their intestinal lining,
LARVAE                                                          dimlit & peeling— 
                                                        We know what traceless hands are reaching for you with declawing blades. With 
                                                                     bladder wash. With chemical castrators.
                                                                             me to a mockpearl crest, taste & know
THE LOCUSTS                        Listen, we understand. Though coated with an asphyxiating foam, we still eat
TRANSLATING                        the silver underfuzz of leaf–
THE NECK-SNAPPED
MICE                                                              Understand fault lies not with desire & its objects, but rather with its intercessors, 
                                                                               hiding behind their padlocked crucifixes.
                                                                                 the scar beneath shaped like a libation bowl
THE LYNX CUB,                        Some of you will die & be the bioluminescent stalks lining the country roads of 
UNMOTHERED                        Sheol.
                                                                                    emptying? I don’t know if he is.
                                                                                                                                                           Closeaway, a dilation of time careens
THE WILD                                       Others will survive & be its unlanterned gatekeepers. Memory, a garter of molten
BLACK ROSES                                thorns pressed to your lips.
                                                                                        through a mother’s car window, like a fruit of gods already weaned
THE STRANDS                            Remember how–come scythe, combine, or atrazine— we always reclaimed the 
OF GOLDENROD                                 prairies & hillsides. How we flashed our bare necks before the blades.
                                                                                                                                                                  worthless. She looks back & the minutes slow
THE HAWKMOTH                                     It is already too late, forgive us. We have beheld the self described Perseuses 
LARVAE                                                  astride their carbonfiber carriages.
                                                                                                               to the stillbeat of a hummingbird her child holds,
THE LOCUSTS                                       Already, forgive us, they’re delousing a bat-winged boy’s hide & power-washing
& NECK-SNAPPED                                     his wings.
MICE
                                                                                                                 wingbroke. Before the coming month of softsplint & birdfeed,
THE LYNX CUB,                                     Already men in another room are heating the pliers, forgive us.
UNMOTHERED
                                                                                                                  a passing truck casts light over her beak
THE WILD                                            [Silent, corollas closed to the wind, they shudder.]
BLACK ROSES
                                                                                                  in the faint line of a grin.
THE STRANDS                                  The prophets are whiskeydrunk & sleeping it off in the attic. The season of feast,
OF GOLDENROD                              forgive us, has ended.
                                                                                                   Tell me, is the way I keep inventing lives a sin?
THE SOIL,                                                Forgive us, we must’ve not shattered our tectonic bones loudly enough, often 
FLASH-FLOODING                           enough. Every warning, gone unheard—
                                                                                                       Is each one, all rose-filigreed & streaked
ALL                                                               O pleasure-nocked, O ensnared, O soonwidow—forgive us.
                                                                                                    with sun, erasing the memory of him as it creaks
                                                                                                    through? As if you might, or even could, remember his name, I listen— 
 
Swanplume boy’s testaments
Month 1, Day 7                               I’ve kept to ritual. Pruned the newborn tufts & shafts before even
                                                                    light can bear witness. & in witness,
                                                                    remember.
Month 0, Hour 2                         When I’m returned home, my mother keeps her hand, cane handle, silkspool
                                                                  tether tightened to me. Through tarslow, insomniac hours. She didn’t
                                                                 know my absence, nor the presences contained
                                                                 within. We’re both
                                                                 caught, then, in cocoons of silence.
Month 1, Day 7.5                           Sometimes, the puckered flaps of skin look like open mouths. Soundless, singing.
                                                                 Throats stuck, protracted, on a stolen word—
Month -2, Day -19                          The marsh harrier femme beside me has stopped talking.
           
Month 4, Day 14                           At the county lilac gardens, I saw the love who fled. He turned
                                                                           away. A tiny bulge of muscle in his back, raised &
                                                                           twitching, contained hours of conversation.
Month 13, Day 28                            I walk into winter alone.
                                                                             If I speak, the neighboring forests
                                                                                    could write answers into my fogged breath, their chill around my exposed
                                                                             neck.
Month -2, Day -19.5                           Unlit & picking at the moss clothing the baseboards, I consider
                                                                            a folktale my mother once respun. Of a girl who escapes
                                                                            her king-father’s advances by pasting & stitching
                                                                            the sopping hides of animals over
                                                                            her body, unseen. What
                                                                            devices, what dresses will I need?
Month 0, Hour 4.5                       Our bodies
                                                                            have formed a parabola of unsaid I’m sorrys. Neither of us can see
                                                                            the end.
Month 37, Day 17                               Name me the tendon threading spirit and body.
                                                                               I’m done singing them as two,
                                                                               alone.
Month -2, Day -19.45               Stillwind years in wilderness. The girl, gone foxish, dwells by a lake till
                                                                          hunters encircle, march her to the country where she peels
                                                                          off skins till nerves leaf with memory. Then
                                                                          marriage & the promise of forever-soft
                                                                          copper, kind aristocracy. Of romance dreamt in fresco.
Month 4, Day 15                                   I lied in half. I saw my ex when—before breath, before thought—
                                                                          he spilled out my petname. A river, opening
                                                                          on bare heights.
Month 13, Day 29                                 Overnight camped beside the creekmouth. The point it feeds into
                                                                                    an unnamed lake. Its stillness a falsehood. Beneath
                                                                                    its thin transparent pane, schools of minnows circling around &
                                                                                    around the skull of a snapping-turtle. Alert, waiting.
Month 37, Day 20                                Funny how I’ve kept to this record, this practice of promising
                                                                                    nothing.
Month -2, Day -19.4                Two weddings. Two runaways. A cloak of furs
                                                                                    & a handful of shorn quills. Why do so many narratives require these
                                                                             cold symmetries?
Month 14, Day 30                                  Outside my tent—a male marsh harrier wearing formel plumage. Small. Outside
                                                                                my tent, bones which house all names. As it pecks away a snow hare,
                                                                                 the men passing above pay no mind.
Month 0, Hour 5                                    Quilt, an illusion of safety. A resolution with no arc. Meanwhile morning deepens
                                                                                   its pockets. So I tell her a story. One she knows. & outside— 
                                                                                   crickets, or are these thrushes now?
 
Noli me tangere
written as A., in memory
Say         because a man pressed her against a longhorn skull
                                                                                                         Say         then after       the surrounding acres mulched
                                     silent          Say               she was only a runaway         a girl
                                                                                                                              with a head full                                           of thistles & hornets–
                  Each rumor                 a shorthand eulogy      siphoning my breath
                                                                          / /
                  St. Teresa envisioned God as the sweetness
                                                                          of excessive pain                                    a tongue of sun
                                              whisking along every nerve–
What is desire but faith made flesh?
                                                                          One body rising to another                                     a mouth
                                                                                                                                                                         contracting in worship–
                           how                  stunt cock lashed around my waist                                             I straddle
                                                                                                                                                                                                                      a man who again & again
                                                                                             moans for his god.             Even Christ
                                                                                                                              felt the alure of Lucifer’s hips
                                    after forty days of caressing sagebrush
                                                                & whispering to locusts.                                             Didn’t my father
                                                                                 ache too, as he rubbed perfume into my mother’s wrists,
                                                                                                                                                zeroed by illness–
                                                                          / /
To long after                  the dead is to long
                           for the divine–                                                                                   For a touch
                                                               which fills all absences or
                           an absence which negates all touch
                                                                          / /
I dream I kiss my mother back
                                 to life       as antlers fan from my back.
                                                                  They snap off in a man’s belly when he yanks
                                  my nettled hair back.
                  Upon waking                                     coughs flecked with blood
a faint hoofmark at the back
                                    of my throat         meaning I don’t need
                                                                         a clinic to tell me there’s no going back—
All afternoon I spit a mixture of
                                                                                                                                             chaw & pomegranate at the backdoors
                                                                   of former friends                                             knowing evening will find me
         curved like a switchback
                                                                                                                        on the shower floor.                                      Hair whitening
in the heat         steam rising from the small of my back.
                                                                          / /
           The gifts left at my doorstep:
                                                                                             floral lotions        pink pastel wigs
                                                                     bombshell push-up bras–
                                               Ways to nudge the body
into its former shape            to conceal
                                                                                        the hollows      the bone-flowering
                                                                                       Face sagged like a bloodhound       the crust punk next door
                                     hands me a choker      clasped with a thrush’s skull.         I wear it
                                                                                                                                                                                               till it slides lose into the well of my neck.
                                                                                          Till my skin sheds all kindnesses.
                                                                          / /
Don’t make me a saint—what I first say when my friend explains
she’s writing me. I know her love will cast me in stainglass,
resplendent & fragmented. Infused with roseate light &
flattened to a frail sheet. An art object. A thing to adore.
You understand? Don’t whore-with-a-golden-heart me. I liked the work.
I liked to fuck & be fucked. What I leave unmentioned: How she only sold
her body out of abandonment, out of a need to unravel then recover. 
Little icon of wreckage. How she hasn’t called in months.
When she phones again, we swap stories from the missed time—
Her sex toys, lost in transit out west. My partner’s proposal.
Her early months on estrogen & our bodies’ tandem pains, the way
she fills out as I winnow. The poem? I ask, & she admits
I’m still peeling off a few veneers. Describes layer upon layer she’s trimmed— 
A pagan folktale overlaid onto mine, a girl who clothes herself 
in dirt & animal hide to avert a kingdom’s gaze,
a litany of figures from my Catholic upbringing. 
I’m not close enough yet she says. We’ve always comforted each other 
poorly. You know I want to stay, right—more command than consolation—
but it’s not going to happen. Read to me or drop it. She starts crying,
cracks a dumb joke about how I won’t miss her handwringing. 
Next call, she reads: “There’s no land left for the young & ill./
If St. Aloysius were to return, he would dissolve/into a pile of ruptured 
condoms by a county road—” No—I cut her off—don’t you dare.
Don’t you dare leave me on my deathbed twice.  
                                                                          / /
                                  Carrying me over the bar’s threshold
my partner fantasizes about my ass                         as if it weren’t
                                                                                                                             twin nubs of bone.
                                                                                                 As if kisses alone don’t mean fatigue.
                                                                                                              I want her anger–
                                                                                                                                                                                       an admission that lack flickers
                                                                                                                                                    through her                 aching, that we’ve both
                                                                                                                     cracked dry with famine.
                                                                                                              Swaying                            I lean
                                                                                                    against her sternum–
                                                                                                                                                           an offering of air.
 
Cassandra J. Bruner, the 2019-2020 Jay C. and Ruth Halls Poetry Fellow, earned her MFA from Eastern Washington University. A transfeminine poet and essayist, their writing has appeared in, or is forthcoming from, Black Warrior Review, Crazyhorse, Muzzle, New England Review, Ninth Letter, Third Coast, and elsewhere. Winner of the 2019 Frost Place competition, her chapbook, The Wishbone Dress, is forthcoming from Bull City Press.