He Calls Me Intense... by Malik Thompson
What litters the ashen cage
of what he calls me: limp
asters, lion’s mane, gold hoops
glinting in the diminished light
of dusk. I am unfamiliar
with the calmer face
of water, my temperament
more akin to steam—I boil,
a wildfire tearing across
the ocean floor. He tells me:
there’s a kindness to rats
dying in plain sight, much better
for us that they’re seen.
He wrote me a poem once,
a bone-flower sonnet,
how it overflowed
with the presence of beasts.
Our neighbor plays organ music
in the alleyway—kneels bare-legged
in fields of broken glass.
Recently, blankets of gray snow,
flecked with petals
of deep crimson, have begun
to overtake my dreams.
Today, I woke up with sweat
rolling off me in icy beads,
the small of my back burning
in the place he placed his hand.
I pushed it off, & felt my skin
drop to a lower temperature,
a degree less smoldering,
a degree less enraged—