would you hold the was-child me,
brown-moon-eyed
even then, beneath Texas Sunheat hotter
than a turtle's slick shell on a highway, or would you hold
teenage-me in the corner of that,
shoved up against that
wall by my friend's father as he leans
in for a kiss and I drip
water from my bathing suit onto the
shag carpet, or would you hold me as I tumble--
embryo-me, down the stairs inside my
mother, away from his clenched, olive-colored fist,
the peach-light blinking on and off,
or, if you were to really hold me, would it be hard for you to accept
my shoulder-shudder of not-wanting to be touched after that time
teenage-me met that
40someodd man in a chat-room-box, hold me later
after he wouldn't take me home until after I had sex with him, would
you be revolted to hold me after he left his smell in my hair and I
told no soul--
not even you, would you be holding me through it-- holding the oldest,
star-lit part of myself that shines galactic-bright like the north on
a cold winter night, would you hold all the pieces of me, the
reeking
purple pieces I have forgotten
my God-childness, not in a
field kneeling beside a stained glass window—not holy, not light-loved,
would you hold me