Grace
by Laura Read

after Stephen Dunn

Some women have it,
a neatness of muscle
a way the body has of shifting

so the skin moves over it
like it is extra, a bit of silk
trailing the tough spirit.

I’ve heard it too—Robert Cray’s
voice climbs three notes,
the sound of Cray’s name

suggests grace, cry, ache.
Grace comes at night,
a low voice in the dark scatters

a dream like weed tips,
smooths my mind back
like hair. And grace

climbs inside me too
like a lover or a winter
or blowsy wine, follows

reluctance to its beginning,
bends me to it. Sometimes,
it lifts the sky’s lid

enough that you can know
its goodness in your mouth,
sleep as it drives you down dark

roads in the rain, the radio
on low, grace’s hands
humming on the wheel,

but mostly grace is a hard thing
and it does not look like itself
until it’s done

like the swinging gate your
arm’s become, now that your
lover’s gone

like the way the wind hurts
your dirty teeth, blows
your solitude wide.

I know a woman whose name
is Grace. I lived
in her narrow house

for a time. Her windows
wore gates. The dust licked
her aunt’s teacups. The wood

floors shook. Outside, swampy
trees leaned over cement.
Wet heat draped itself

against us like a dress.
In the kitchen, I watched
the quiet rest, listened

to Grace above me,
in her ceiling-fanned
room, doing what Grace

does when she gets nervous:
rolls Yahtzee dice
on her old desk.

 

Originally Published in Cider Press Review, Volume 2.

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