Katrina Kaye
if the storm did come,
i fear my first
instinct would be
to walk to the apex
bold and frenzied
my streets have been
dry for too long
leaving me desperate
to stand in the rain
i would trade my sight
for the scent of distant
thunder
my taste for the prickle
of hair twirled
in every direction.
i have prayed
for destruction.
but what do i know?
my mother was never
ripped into the sky
by unruly clouds,
my house never blown
down despite the coyotes
that surround back door
i have never wakened
to shattered glass
underneath my morning feet.
why should i distress the
wrath of weather when my
New Mexican sky is endless blue
my sun bright enough i see
only red in the darkness.
i want the storm,
the wind, the water,
i want to be ravaged by the
wrath of unkind gods.
i know this wish
may not be kind
threats of storms ravage
those who prefer to hold tight
to rock and earth
and toss bodies
like crumpled paper
hoping to cling
on to abandoned words.
i have not felt
that windfall, and
i do not seek to
inhabit the pain
of the others
but i can’t
help but to search the sky for
gathering clouds and sit pale in the
wind hoping for the sky to crack.
