Poetry
Spiced chocolate
I stumble into the sharp edges of love
for women who gift me spiced chocolate.
How do they know? I can’t remember
ever confessing in public,
thought I had been careful
to declare no preferences
beyond small talk’s necessities:
For sunlight to descend dappled
through the cottonwoods,
for the damp weight of forest air
to be lifted by an ocean zephyr,
to contemplate Copithorne’s letters,
die inside Baldwin’s lines, float away
to Davis over Parker. But never
such an embarrassment of egoism.
Tropical hillsides around the equator
whisper what I am not worth
before I can dream of buying myself
the expensive taste of bittersweet chiles.
Yet she stands at my door, has
hand-ribboned a small box
of Mexican lightning for me,
cocoa so electric
it will still her name
in my mouth
as it burns