Saturday, April 18, 2015

Alan Catlin- Three Poems


Wolfwoman

All the gestures she
used to repel evil
spirits, projected auras,
embodied voices speaking
variant tongues, were
of no use, insufficient
for the task of banishing
the one she was in
need of most, an unfriendly
servant of the distilled
ones, he who was denying
her service, jet fuel for
an internal rocket launch
she was determined must have
to leave the current, mundane
gravitational pull of sobriety
or so she seemed to be
saying, in an incredibly
roundabout way, eyes
glazing over, wide with
adrenaline, fears she can
no longer control, in total
denial of what was be said,
"You want to leave now?
or should I call 911 for
valet service?""Valet service!?
What are you talking about?"
"Handcuffs, strap down gurneys,
full body restraints, shots of
Halodol with Thorazine chasers---
you know, the usual stuff."
"You think you're so smart.
Just wait for the next full
Moon. I'll be back for you."
And she would be, fingernails
filed as claws, teeth as fangs,
the wind howling at her back.



Frostbite

Wherever it was
he'd been doing
time, there was
a premium paid
for head cases,
cold blood running
thin as the long
white scars that
would never com-
pletely heal on
his face as if
some wild thing
had tested its
claws for sharp-
ness there & a
demon had picked
the scabs off
at night from
each end creating
running sores down
his neck & forehead
where the black
eye patch sd.
CLOSED above
the socket where
the eye should have
been & what was
left in his mouth
like teeth was
gold capped, though
the spaces in be-
tween were black
crowns waiting to
be honed to a point
like those fingers
of his rattling
dollar coins on
the bar surely any-
thing they touched
would die a horrible
frostbitten death
 
 
 
Hell Hounds

"Do not eat anything in the underworld"

Wherever they had been,
their environment had treated
them in an unkind manner,
unless they were accustomed to
wearing clothes that had seen
the inside of forest fires, lakes
of industrial wastes that could
only be encountered wading,
knee deep, through concrete
sewage pipes into culverts
where stagnant runoff bred
mutant insects, plants resistant
to every known defoliant,
every toxic killer spray
currently in use.  Surviving
these ordeals had made their skins
tougher than rawhide: sunburnt
and cracked where thin coats of
muscle, sinew, flesh covered
bone met their clothes that had stiffened
into something like denim armor,
layers that glowed in the dark with
a strange phosphorescent aura of
other worldliness that made their
eyes mostly off-white with pale
shaded liver spotting where irises
should have been, their black tongues
flicking broken stubs instead of teeth,
their breath a visible waste cloud
as they hissed something about a
powerful, more than one keg of beer
thirst, a kind of smile on the desiccated
strips of skin where their lips should
have been, their cheeks the last firewall
of resistance for what burned inside.

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