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     FEMME FATALE 
	 
	It's a crime story she's in: 
	betrayal and larceny, few clues. 
	Someone stole what she lived for, 
	then made off like a thief in the night or high noon. What shall she  
	do? This: 
	slip a heel on each foot and set out, 
	making a snapping sound as she steps. 
	The man she loves smiles 
	from the drugstore's rack 
	of magazines, just in. 
	Looks like he's wrapped his movie, 
	dropped his wife on a Frisian Island 
	and is flying his girlfriend to St. Tropez. 
	The men who love her finger coins 
	in the stale linings of their front 
	pockets and whimper "What's your name?" 
	The job she wanted went 
	to the man who tells the truth 
	from one side of his mouth, lies 
	from the other: a bilingual. 
	The job she got lets her 
	answer the questioning phone all day. 
	Her disappointment has appetite, 
	gravity. Fall in, you'll be crunched 
	and stretched 
	thin as Fettuccine. Watch out for her, 
	this woman, there is more than one. 
	That woman with you, for instance, 
	checking herself in the mirror 
	to see where she stands-- 
	she's innocent so far, but someone 
	will disappoint her. 
	Even now you're beginning to. 
	Even now you're in danger. 
	 
	(From In Danger Roundhouse Press/Heyday Books)   
	MORNING AFTER THE 6.1 
	 
	At work we tell 
	and tell of disasters, wrack 
	of flood tides, windchill, uncontained 
	fires, eye of storm, core of volcano. 
	Remember the Sylmar when the ground 
	pitched like the deck of a ship? 
	Power lines jerked and snapped; 
	electricity bolted into the dark like 
	unspeakable language. 
	We're too happy to work. Survival 
	has gone to our heads like pirate rum 
	Dead, stand back and make way-- 
	we are the living. 
	 
	(First published in Western Wind: An Introduction to 
	Poetry Fifth Edition, eds. David Mason and John Frederick Nims, McGraw 
	Hill)   HURRYING TOWARD THE PRESENT 
	 
	“No past tense permitted” 
	- Kay Boyle from A Poem for Samuel Beckett 
	 
	Darlings, this may be the only 
	great escape we ever make: 
	start dropping your past 
	behind you—seeds, kernels 
	to be pecked up by scavengers. 
	You won't find your way back. 
	 
	Or try this: package it, 
	mark it Was. Leave it in a locker 
	at the Greyhound Bus station. 
	Leave the door ajar. Let 
	a thief inherit it. You can bet 
	it'll dog him like it dogged you. 
	 
	Step smack-flat into 
	the blasting present, 
	your heart asserting Now-Now. 
	You feel neither the pain 
	left behind, nor what waits 
	tapping its hard foot 
	up ahead. 
	 
	And now, stand up the future! 
	Let it go on pacing and cursing 
	as it peers towards your whereabouts, 
	and the cat’s eye gleam 
	of its watch calculates 
	the lateness of the hour. 
	 
	(first published in The Cider Press Review)   
	DEAR HOMEBOY 
	Something kind of stealthy  
	loiters near my door but it’s not 
	you—it’s just air turned grainy 
	violet where night and city 
	meet. Know what’s going down? 
	Total eclipse of the moon, 
	Kid. It’s pretty dim  
	out. The gas station’s block 
	of light—like the landmark 
	at the world’s end—says  
	jump off here. 
	If you were there you'd use it 
	to check out your reflection 
	on the hood of someone’s car. 
	You'd use the neighbor’s zinnias 
	to wipe the street life off your feet, 
	use your condition as an alibi: 
	It couldn't ‘ve been me, man, 
	I'm, like, dead! 
	You'd consider knocking, take on 
	that shrewd look you always got 
	to hide a mind just half 
	made up, one hand idly questioning 
	the spot around your ribs where 
	blood streaked out on asphalt 
	and turned black, looked 
	black, in the liquor store blur 
	and bulb of ambulance. Look 
	up. That moon. A tablet dissolving 
	in blue mist, or mauve. I could swear 
	someone sauntered to my door. 
	The moon’s half gone—I know 
	the feeling, sure. And you, 
	you're gone more. 
	 
	(Slightly different version first published in 
	Ploughshares) 
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