
their bones crushed between our teeth,
their spines salting the slugs
of our tongues.
We slice flesh,
defibrillate pink tissue;
you're describing something out there
in the world and I'm hardly listening,
watching your lips flinch,
glossed by wine.
Such a dry sting: the tang of sloes
bitten from thorns, the tongue's winding
gear rusted, speech seized
in the sea-wrecked skull.
Past cutlery shoals, lawn tablecloths, cane chairs,
past our bottle of Pescador in its sleeve of ice
hillsides stiffen with the slow sucking
of olive trees and emerald pines.
Now a sea is withering in our heads,
its nacre polishing our mouths;
eye to eye across this café table
we swallow an ocean, a desert,
a desert, an ocean.
.