From The Huntress
It's time to go up to your front door, Mother,
and ring the rattling buzzer of a bell,
the door with two curved fangs.
I go in, into the muscular throat of the hall,
down the tunnel that's closing now
to a pinpoint of light.
I'm in the swallowing living-room,
washing it for you, half-alive,
like a man preparing for the rain-dance
in the dry arroyo. He reaches
into the pit and washes the snakes
so that later when he dances with the ‘little mothers'
in his mouth, they won't bite.
I'm a child playing in the pen
with my pet rattlers,
giving them bread and milk.
As long as I'm unscared
they won't strike. And you're saying,
"Only a girl-child can do this".
My cheeks are almost seamless now,
countless grafts hide the necrosis.