Lord of the Dance
/Kirstin Allio
I dreamed I had to hold
water without
drowning.
I couldn’t chew,
I couldn’t point
my toes to dive.
A courtly old ballet
master,
Death,
stabbed his Swan
Point, stood on
Ceremony, the last
stage, the light
from the columbarium
door the wedge
of a wedding train.
Barnacles of salt
had digested the stairs
down to the shore,
and the final
step left
a carbon footprint.
The sky was black.
A cormorant
flapped off,
spokeless.
I couldn’t speak,
and I felt my ballet
training prevented me from breaking
into a natural stride.
Kirstin Allio’s books are Buddhism for Western Children (University of Iowa) and Garner (Coffee House), and the story collection Clothed, Female Figure (Dzanc). Recent work is out or forthcoming in AGNI, American Short Fiction, Bennington Review, Conjunctions, Fence, New England Review, Plume, Poetry Northwest, Prairie Schooner, Subtropics, and elsewhere. She has received fellowships from Brown University’s Howard Foundation and MacDowell.