By Jemma Leigh Roe
––after Natalie Diaz
I thought I would not live until the end of that summer
feeding on the creosotic air and the turquoise sky
when I thought the body was imaginary
when I thought that love was real.
But the monsoon came in September
to flood the arroyo where I deserted
my body night after night.
The coyotes who wandered on the mountain descended
and stayed up with me to watch
the silent sun rise from my sluggish heart,
rise through my dry-stricken throat that stung
like scorpion weed with blooms of amethyst stones
I wore to protect myself.
Only then, I felt the river flow through my veins
pulsing in the chaste aridity, beating the never-ending heat
during that summer of wildfires
when a white-tailed deer bowed before it and drank
ignoring the hunter’s gun
when I died in the brush
and came back to life.
Jemma Leigh Roe studied art at the Université Paris-Sorbonne and received a PhD in Romance Languages and Literatures from Princeton University. Her poems and artwork appear in The Ilanot Review, The Fourth River, Thin Air, Canyon Voices, Feral: A Journal of Poetry and Art, and others. www.jemmaleighroe.com