The corpses
weigh nothing, nearly nothing, even your breath
is breeze enough to scatter them
We steamed them
in tupperware with a damp sponge
then we tweezed the stiff wings open
The wing colors
would brush off if you touched them
3,000
butterflies raised and gassed
and shipped to Evolution, the store in New
York
rented by an artist hired to design a
restaurant
He wanted to
paper the walls with butterflies
Each came
folded in its own translucent envelope
We tweezed them
open, pinned them into rows
on styrofoam flats we stacked in towers in
the narrow
hallway leading to the bathroom
Evolution
called itself a natural history store
It sold
preserved birds, lizards, scorpions in lucite, bobcat
with the eyes dug out and glass ones fitted,
head turned
Also more
affordable bits like teeth
and peacock feathers, by the register
a dish of raccoon penis bones
This was on
Spring
The sidewalks
swarmed with bare-armed people
there to see the city
You could buy
your own name in calligraphy
or written on a grain of rice
by someone at a folding table
Souvenir
portraits of taxis and the Brooklyn Bridge
lined up on blankets laid over the
pavement
The artist we
were pinning for had gotten famous
being first to put a dead shark in a gallery
For several million dollars each he sold what
he described
as happy pictures which were rainbow dots
assistants painted
on white canvases
I remember actually thinking his art
confronted death,
that’s how young I was
We were paid
per butterfly
The way we sat,
I saw the backs
of the other pinners’ heads more than their
faces
One’s braids
the color of wine, one’s puffy headphones, feather cut
and slim neck rising from a scissored collar,
that one
bought a raccoon penis bone on lunch break
Mostly we
didn’t speak
Another life glimpsed in a detail mentioned, leaving or
arriving
She lived with a carpenter who fixed her lunches
Come fall I’d be in college
I smelled the
corpses on my fingers when I took my smoke break
leaning against a warm brick wall facing
the smooth white headless
mannequins in thousand-dollar shift dresses
The deli next
door advertised organic toast and raisins on the vine
Mornings, I
tried to learn from eyeliner
and shimmer on faces near mine on the train
Warm fogged
imprint on a metal pole
where someone’s grip evaporated
Everyone looking down when someone walked through
asking for help
At Evolution,
talk radio played all day
A cool voice
giving hourly updates
on the bombing of another city which it
called
the conflict
The pinner in
headphones sometimes hummed
or started a breathy lyric
“Selfish girl—”
I watched my
tweezers guide the poisonous exquisite
blue of morpho wings
Their legs like
jointed eyelashes
False eyes on
the grayling wingtips
to protect the true face
The monarch’s
wings like fire
pouring through a lattice
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1 comment:
Unbelievable, gripping, horrible in its mindless grotesquerie.
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