The Black Napkin Volume 1 Issue 4 | Page 18

13

Lovers Learn to Howl Their Names

Floor wet and dirty we learn

our names in the language

of bodies. I could call you

Hip-thrust, Long-lashes,

Cuticle-bite, Honey-eyes.

You could call me Teeth-grit,

Open-mouth, Clit-dick, Cock-lust

I lap your up skin like salt lick.

Look to find what caress

will make the dormant vines

resting outside the rusted-shut windows

want to invade us. Call it Common,

call it Jasminum-officinale,

we know it as Poet-jasmine

it blooms like we do—falsely

innocent in virginal white.

A heady scent that betrays

want, desire. I want to come

with you buried in jasmine.

Your tongue penetrates the open space

of my mouth. The vines scratch

at the window panes—our tongues

meet and outside the twinings

dance as they unlatch the frames

and slip inside like your hair

between my fingers, like fists

of leaves—ready, one two three!—

thrown in the air and you fall

around me. We bleed, moment

with movement, our existence—

in waves the way flowers bloom:

sweat, tears, semen secretions.

We smell of the unspoken sins

mothers warn children about—

the Holy vulgar musk of bodies