Amber Flora Thomas

San Francisco / United States

A Bird In Hand

I've memorized its heart pounding into my thumb.
Breath buoys out. My fingers know how to kill,
closing on the bird's slippery head.

I don't remember. Was it that beak bit my chin?
Was it a claw cut my wrist? I blow feathers
away from its chest, smelling pennies and rain.

Skin like granite, a real white-blue, flecked
by knots of new growth. I found my need,
cold in cupped palms, just the way I was taught.

I return to account for whose neck falls around
backwards. Eyes that go cataract bring clouds.

That fat pearl with wings looks like water disappearing in me.
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