Old fang-in-the-boot trick. Five-chambered
asp. Pit organ and puff1 adder2. Can live
in any medium save ice. Charmed by the flute3
or the first thunderstorm in spring, drowsy4
heart stirs from the cistern5, the hibernaculum,
the wintering den6 of stars. Smells like the cucumber
served chilled on chipped Blue Willow7. Her garden
of clings, sugars, snaps, and strings8. Her creamy breasts
we called pillows and her bird legs and fat fingers
covered with diamonds from the mines in Africa.
The smell of cucumber Her mystery roses
Heading out Bandera to picnic and pick corn,
the light so expert that for miles
you can tell a turkey vulture
from a hawk9 by the quiver in the wing.
Born on April Fools', died on Ground Hog's,
he pulls over not to piss but to blow away
any diamondback unlucky enough to be
on the road between San Antonio and Cotulla.
Squinting10 from the back of the pickup11
into chrome and sun and shotgun confection,
my five boy cousins who love me more
than all of Texas and drink my spit
from a bottle of Big Red on a regular basis
know what the bejeweled and the gun-loading
have long since forgotten. And that is:
Snakes don't die. They just play dead. The heart
exposed to so many scrapes, bruises12, burns,
and bites sheds its skin, sprouts13 wings and fl ies,
becomes the two-for-one sparkler on
the Fourth of July, becomes what's slung14 between
azure15 and cornfield: the horizon.