Will anyone believe me when I say I smell menstrual blood

before it flows, promise of copper and earth, animal life


that dogs my footsteps, propels me into eros, errors of desire?

Or that love is like a wild carrot, stringed fingers seeking


dark water under sand by the roadside, feathered pollen

head with its one velvet eye an illusion of lace. Pull hard,


uproot and taste the fruit, small and sweet beneath a carapace

of wood. These days, my husband opens car doors for me,


moves to the outside of sidewalks, steers me by the elbow—

I don’t protest. Is this love, the way I want to cradle


my mother’s ancient head, tender and little between my

hands? Or how when inhaling a passing man’s scent—


citronella, crayons, Ivory Soap—I want to slide the length

and breadth of his arms beneath my palms, place my cheek against


his stranger’s chest, stretch my nostrils, burrow into muscle. Let

me lay my naked limbs down in soft grass, touch what walks


or crawls or remains still. Let the garter snake surprise me with

sun baked dryness, the moose roving the apple orchard in autumn,


calling for his mate, summon me with his terrible musk.

Let me do this now.