Among the Barley

We met at the tail of a check-out queue

and when she turned her head she spread

like blood through snowflakes, all melt and fire,

as my ripe tomatoes tumbled to the floor.

And when she bared her chamomile thighs,

her red-toed sunblaze, my body became

barley fields on fire. My frazzled ears roared.

My old house flared to fizz-burned bananas,

red meat frizzle-zings, the attic razed to hell,

and I knelt at the doorway singing High Hosannas.

                                  Ω

After she’d cut her doorkey and laid out

blueprints of her kitchen cupboards’ insides

I felt deep-bosomed, big-bellied and wide

as a turnip field, days before harvest. 

I bought walking boots and walked through river-

wound groves. I bought allegories of birth

and death, framed them, and drilled them to

her wall. And how they fell. When she entered

a room eyes swivelled and bulged for her,

red crab-apples craving for the earth.

                                  Ω

For you, I wanted to leaf and take root.

So I stood firm and pulled my lips full gape,

wanting to mouth apples. Uaugghh. I uaugghhed

nothing until it hurt. And then I surrendered.

Orchards of apples began to appear—  

pear-shaped, plum-coloured, pineapple-dappled.

My eyes turned seed, my veins fructosed

and my mouth bloomed stem-twigs for sound

and wounded fruit for sense, gulping forth

a juiced-up speech, or merely talking apples.

                                  Ω   

I slap a second lick of banana dream gloss

on the back room’s walls while you measure

the cove for hanging your unframed mirror.

Soon we’ll discuss our diaries, looking for

windows when we can next DIY together.

The forecast is for spells of lower pressure.

I finger-slick sweat from your pent shoulders

as the sun leaks onto the living room floor

to trickle down thighs and thrawn limbs—

barley sheaves waiting for the thresher.

                                  Ω

We walk a line that curves from day

to day, often squiggly, higgledy-piggledy

as if etch-a-sketched by a sugar-rushed

two-year-old, so that I find myself

rushing through a maze of malls, esplanades,

restaurants, barley fields, beds, lakeside

pathways, garden patios with sundials—

meeting points that blend and deepen

and brighten and bloom the way a room

looks bigger when you’ve been in it for a while.

                                  Ω

We meant to make love on the stairs,

the deskchair, the windowsill, the throw

your sister brought back from Brazil.

Now we zigzag and busy-buzz by

one another like honey bees snuffing

pollen in the autumnal red and gold glare.

So let our love be watertight and let

the breeze blow through it. Let us be solid

oak and fluid. Let us be truth, let us be dare,

the swallow’s dive sculpted into rock, and air.