JONATHAN'S
END
The AIDS first appeared
like a black dog's bite
and would go away,
kicked and yelping.
Then there was the throat
full of beetles
and legs like broken chairs
found on the ocean's edge.
Jonathan knew to rent this beach house.
He'd die in Malibu, by God.
It's only one month's rent,
he told his mother in Reno.
Besides, there'll be cash left over
for you.
The sea will make him clean,
take away the vomit, the blood,
the slow strings of high tide
moving his eyes like puppets.
He walks with a fever
into the Pacific each day now,
bobbin, buoy, bottle in the waves.
On the shore he puts his ear
to the white silt,
he hears the heartbeat
of the earth.
And spells out his name,
Jonathan,
in the sand.
from Malibu Stories
(c) 1991, Black Tie Press
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