July 2016 This is the key to the kingdom, rustproof nickel silver, cut in the hardware aisle by a man in uniform on a rotating steel carbide blade, a vice securing the blank, the key's rounded bow a medallion of sun with a hole punched through to hang on its galactic ring. Weightless in the palm, the shoulder is sharp to mark the exact depth of engagement. A jagged range of peaks garnish the shaft, align with wards in the pin tumbler keyway and unlock the door, swung open to reveal the kingdom. Of rain, of infancy, kingdom of clapboard, concealed carry, of the night shift at Frito-Lay, nuclear gerontology at Los Alamos, L-shaped couches, tributaries of heroin up the Mississippi basin, of prison writing workshops, kingdom of arugula, of a slaughtered pee wee team invoking the mercy rule, peaches and asters, of helicopter cinematography, a girl blowing bubbles over the river, of a poet unable to sustain the Blakean conviction that all subjectivities, predator and prey, are holy, that police are, a coyote stalking the pinnacles, bald eagle at the zoo. In that kingdom there is a state, "the state with the prettiest name," land of flowers on the conquistador's tongue, the state of brackish water, coastline and glade, made habitable by sugar and central air, porn mecca with oranges, flakka zombie flail, grandchildren lollygagging in manatee exhibits, space exploration over a red tide choking the cape east of the polis where a dance club pulses until a man enucleates its love. If blinded by hatred of those unlike himself, or by hatred of himself, the stem that anchors the thorn is the same. In that state there is a city, initiating its morning thaw, flag over the courthouse at half mast, a hollow sidewalk yawning to accept boxes of granola, olives, wheels of manchego slid down into the deli's larder, newspapers slung at stoops from the window of a crawling minivan, women in yoga pants clutching Lululemon mats like scrolls, diesel exhaust, certified nurses in scrubs streaming into the hospital where a man bleeds from a hole in his still uncertain future and a woman veers into labor, the ovaries in the fetus in her womb already freighted with all the egg cells her child will possess. Over that city there is a forecast, severe weather, a storm that hangs like a decaying gourd from twine in the kingdom's portico, gourd of a variety present in the New World before Columbus, the exact moment of its breaking impossible to predict but certain to arrive when its curved neck can no longer sustain the weight of its own rot and snaps, drops, blows open nutty white flesh on steps below, gale force and hail wrung out of the jet stream's trough and bulge contact zones, over grasslands then south to the city where white men confuse any threat to their absolute power as a form of persecution. In that storm there is a house, its roofline lashed by rain that courses down asphalt shingles to decorative gables, slides over dormers, pools in gutters then runs down downspouts onto the saturated lawn, water wrapping the house like a body in muslin. A house in old Colonial style but thrown off by additions in the back, interior walls subtracted for flow, a decade-by-decade replacement of hardwood floors, fixtures, the chimney sealed up, molting over generations each original element like the ship of Theseus, this poem of slow violence with bodies that change in a form that remains. And now that she is at rest, poor woman, now that the sky's ritual errancies have tried to sack her house and failed, and fled, Justine is alone again. A black kerchief tied across her eyes, she measures in darkness ground coffee beans strong as rocket fuel on a digital scale, pours steaming water in circles to bloom the beans. When the brew is rich and viscous, she glides to her typewriter and writes "In that house there is only this room." She removes her sword from the wall and cuts the blindfold from her eyes. In that room there is a bed, Justine's bed, tucked with hospital corners, quilt spread tight as a drum skin and depicting a black cross side to side, toe to head, marking the kingdom's epicenter in crosshairs beneath which she nightly slept. The bed is empty. Justine is gone. She drags her sword through thick woods, alive with new perceptual acuity, hacking at brambles, hoverflies mobbing her head as she reaches the brook, blade glinting with orange flecks of sunset as she writes the word "retribution" in the sky, leaving tracers in her vision like a sparkler on the Fourth of July. On the bed Justine left behind, there is a book bound in leather, the one that wrote her into allegory long before statues in her honor were erected in civil squares, dog eared at the passage in which she is still an ideal, standing blind in train tracks with a falcon on her shoulder. Before she sees the locomotive, she hears the bell, bell, bell, feels the ties tremble, and then the engine's pistons announcing the arrival of freight: an eight ton Bearcat armored personnel vehicle, assault rifles, Kevlar helmets, pilotless surveillance drone, hounds of hell, bomb-disarming robots and 400 sworn officers of the law. In the final pages of that book there is a flowering plant, blue false indigo, native to America, growing wild at the border of the forest where Justine now stands, its roots described as woody, black, unkillable, branching underground in a rhizomatic hydra of power belonging to no one, to all, its genus derived from the Greek, bapto, as in dip, immerse, baptize, and make new from criminal soil. In writing, the plant is motionless, an image that flickers in the mind and recedes again into the grammar of its making, but in the wind that wraps Justine just now, the plant is stereoscopic, grey-green leaves waving, violet flowers in riot. In that plant there is a sap that goes blue on contact with oxygen. It contains a toxin. Toxic blue dye comes alive as Justine slices into the hairless stem. Silken weapon, it beads then streams toward her heels, a blue the Greeks could not see, blue of the ribbon holding back Washington's hair, blue robin egg hidden in the nest, blue of the officer's uniform the moment before he raises his firearm, Neptune's blue glow, blue of her birth certificate and a darker blue passport embossed with the kingdom's gold eagle, one talon for the olive branch, one for the arrows. In that blue there is a belief that the kingdom's dome has been sealed from within, that the exceptions have devoured the rule, that the watchers need watched and the charges dismissed, that the presumption of safety has been put on permanent layaway for those not born into it, a presumption replaced with this color that cuts, as it has, as it must, both ways. Justine's eyes ache. The sky is bright with exhortation. She fills each vial like an inkwell, clambers over monster ferns, and heads to the city to face the king. Belief in the blue, in its cruel illusion of habeas corpus, of "You may have a body." Blue in the sap, in its toxin of last resort. Sap in the plant, blue false indigo, its deep and communal roots. Plant in the book where Justine's an ideal. Book on the bed in the room she fled for the city, where if you stand, if you run, if you resist or comply, where if your pants are low or high, where to be visible is to hang in the balance. Bed in the room, room in the house where she cut the kerchief from her eyes. House in a storm mistaking its temporary strength as permanent weather, storm in the city where Justine follows a river of others into the tear gas plume. City in the state with the prettiest name, state in the kingdom that forgot its key and kicked in the door. Copyright © 2016 Ted Mathys. Used with permission of the author. |