1.
She stood at the water’s edge.
They all said she was in love.
She stood at the water’s edge;
a hand grew from the surface,
sprouted like a pea plant.
She plucked waterlogged nails from each fingertip
and cracked them open like peapods.
She was searching.
We all knew she was in love.
2.
She wore a white dress.
Damp, it clung to her body—
something like foreplay the way it groped her.
Some said they saw him:
flashing and flailing, drunken and dying.
She stood at the water’s edge.
Maybe a head was visible somewhere
in the depths, through the fog.
She stood staring, deeply in love.
3.
A spring day, 1932
and everything was white.
He was happy and she too was smiling.
She said important words;
he repeated them but with feeling.
Flowers, rings, gems, kisses,
and were there doves?
Standing at the water’s edge,
Maybe she saw the blurred reflection of doves.
4.
Oh, he touched her.
He scraped her white flesh
with razor finger nails—
told her to moan.
He bruised her,
mostly where clothes covered.
Oh, he touched her when he was drunk.
She was in love at the water’s edge.
A hand grew out and touched her.
5.
She stood at the water’s edge
and we watched her weep.
They knew that she loved him.
Into the pool, blood dripped—
but no tears— and screams flooded. Screams.
Oh, he touched her.
She dropped slowly to her knees,
knelt at the water’s edge,
screamed, but we saw her weeping.
6.
Oh, she was deeply in love.
Against a bloody hand, she fought.
Her body writhed almost as during rough sex
and blood dripped and bruises formed,
and she resisted, then weakly resisted.
That strong hand held tight.
From the depths, he tugged,
and at first, she screamed.
Then, we knew, too in love, she fell in with him.