Tongue | Michele M Miller

7 mins read

trying to keep it quiet     I’m cramming in  egg shells and

potato peels     emptying the fridge  rolling out line after

line        of flag-print stamps     

oh     please    keep it from shrieking at the street preacher

to just  shut the fuck up     or        even more horrifying   

from singing    amen

            over and     over     and over         this honey-tipped pistil    inside

my hybiscus mouth invites      tongues of lovers      which buzz in

unannounced 

why can’t it be      

            a worker of overnight 

wonders     a delicate slug shellacking 

     your lackluster lips with soft blind  touches     paving the

way through the dark 

                                    with iridescent tiffany spit

            squealing machine      guttural heart in a tooth-ribbed trap     it

plots the sly differences between waxed fruit and you                 the thin

line  between laughter and slaughter

            (when I was thirteen         I slid it across the mouth               

⠀of my grandparents’ scarecrow     for practice     attracted                         

by the no-risk opportunities      of those straw-filled bulges     so

much better 

                                    proportioned than my lipglossed pillow)

now     it drags me around     wanting  

new things to lick    my neighbor’s purebred dog      her just-waxed jag     the

boy 

⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀who works next to me      a fallen cake in the oven     it

⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀sticks out in your direction 

when I’m not in the mood     threatens      

to beg on its knees

                                    to show it      who’s boss     

I’ll cut it out, gift-wrap it and give it to you:     here

only I know later I’ll find you     

                                                  ⠀⠀ wielding it          in your kitchen

   taste tester                dish scrubber     

                                               ⠀⠀⠀⠀ mute extender for soup


Michele M Miller holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Arizona. Honors for her poetry include an Arizona Commission on the Arts fellowship, and designation as runner-up for the National Poetry Series and the Kore Press First Book Prize. Her chapbook The Pocket Museum of Natural History is now available on Amazon and was a finalist in the New Women’s Voices Series from Finishing Line Press. Michele writes and photographs in her heartland, the Sonoran Desert of Tucson, Arizona. You can find her on Instagram @michelemariemiller.