http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
It blackens my heart to tell you
    The moment your wings shrivel up
    And you become a man
    Dropping down, stunned,
     Into the home we share.        
You stagger an hour
    
	    Accepting what you are,
    
	    My Darling, Dark, Disturbed and Hopeless Creature.
I must protect you from the light.
I keep my heart on Dim
Hoping my disenchantment
Does not get caught in my throat
When I say those words to you
Designed to numb your misery.
 
Unalterable Path,
Loveless Beast,
The blueblack shriek of night
Fits you like a custom made suit.
 
If I wished to hurt you
I would reveal
You chose this life.
You were not born to it.
But, who else would you be?
Add up the hours, the days, the months,
The little deaths that went unmarked.
 
End it not for me. 
This blurry sheet of rain won't stop. It knows.
It could pummel for eternity
And never wash this street clean
Of the words that fell
On the bent blue orchids, wolfkiss lilies, the orange grove.
The ice paralyzes everything.
 
If spring ever has the faith to rise,
I hope the words unkind
Did not kill the roots of flowers,
The laughter of future hours,
The neon feathered birds
That trust enough to light 
On the recovering trees.
Angels are coming to cripple your wings.
It's not going to be a gang fight.
It won't be violent.
They will come in inexplicable tenderness and mercy.
You will be rendered unconscious by their grace.
 
When you wake
Disheveled, stiff, flightless,
You will have gazed into
Their prescient eyes
And felt their unwavering hands.
 
This loss will be a fair exchange,
 
Touched by the constant
That is a measure
Of the soul.
"Kneel in the path of the runaway train."
		  The note is written on a lace napkin
		  Beneath an empty glass.
		  The walls are red glitter,
		  Table of popsicle sticks
		  Spray painted gold.
		  The hammock entangling me
		  Is made of tie-dyed wedding gowns
	    Sewn together with the whiskers of wolves.
Out of my element, perhaps.
		  But do not tell me the glass is half full.
		  I know what empty is.
		  It is your construction.
		  Your biology.
		  Your destiny.
		   
		  Do not blink when the wolf rises.
		  You have always been 
		  In his eyes
		  Laughing about how blood tastes
	    Like old copper pennies in your mouth.
Crisp boxes are coming to remove us
		   In billions of subatomic particles.
		   Smaller and smaller grow our lives
		   With every silence,
		   Every held breath.
		    
		   Movers are crushing
		   Our priceless Monet.
		   What do they know,
		   Procuring their sad clown paintings at Walmart?
		   Velvet Elvises from roadside stands.
		    
		   The sea is littered
		   With charred leaves, featherfall,
		   Fingerprintless knives of thieves.
		    
		   Oh, Darling,
		   Your name is about to be called
		   In the black church
	     Of poison candles and plastic flowers.
There lingers a tektite statue
		    Of an unlikely angel
		    On the stained glass nightstand.
		    
		    She knows how easily worlds collide.
		    
		    Her parts were gathered 
		    From the strewnfield
		    In the seventies.
		    
		    Her halo is the perfect ablation
		    Of molten glass,
		    Wings of shatter cone,
		    Arms, hydrothermal selenite,
		    Eyes, carved of shocked basement,
		    Gown, impact breccia.
		    
		    Her lips and hands 
		    Are almost impercepibly darkened
		    With the faint green of breccia-suevite.
		    
		    The scientist in me understands.
		    Still, I need to know,
		    Who has she kissed?
		    What has she brushed
      With her dark fingertips?
 Rebecca Lu Kiernan 
has published in ASIMOV'S SCIENCE FICTION, MS.   MAGAZINE, NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW, SPACE AND TIME and numerous books and   magazines in the U.S. and Australia.  She was nominated for a Rhysling   Award for her cautionary tale, "When a Snake Bites You in the Ass".  She   is a regular contributor to BEWILDERING STORIES. 
        Canada's   Ygdrasil Literary Magazine is dedicating an issue to the presentation of   "Letters To the Bat" in its entirety. This series is a dark follow up   to her previously published series, "Rummy Park", "An Unkindness of   Ravens", and "Jepatio Street".
        Founding editor of GECKO MAGAZINE,   she lives in Destin, Florida and hosts the Eternal Poem Project at   www.whattodowhenhellbreaksloose.blogspot.com