Constellation
Originally published in Ignatian Literary Magazine
Colten Dom
My hands turn to your back like
tonight’s sky, gleaming
somewhere in an ancestral skull
revealed by a retreating glacier—
reconvened after a cloudy evening,
squinting, kneading familiar structures,
lines of gravity placing each stain
as I find it.
Freckles metastasize; stars pull and
are themselves pulled.
You touch my skin to
assign texture—pink-amber like
boiling syrup—the furred places
you bury your nose.
Do you see riders, belts, gods?
Waypoint divinities—or have
those charts faded to ruin?
Each library redrafts heaven;
ply the waters and yank free
from our nighttime, massaging
constellations clean of curse,
counting the moles
penned by that senseless author sun.
In future,
your freckles will decompose
into a raincloud—fragments
of skin turning to stone ’til
we map one another again
on canvas sheets. For now,
I look upon your back and think
What a terrific yawn!
What a gorgeous sneeze!