It didn’t take a white-hot whirlwind
To set me down for good
on this smoking plain;
I was turning hard already—
tired of the edicts and injunctions,
of following my husband’s
righteous backside.
I wanted to stay put.
I had friends here, raw
as unbeaten linen, but kind
in their way. I stand facing the village.
It is raining ashes. The groans
of our dying neighbors fall
softly, like the rain.
A few stumble from caves,
alive, seeking water.
Wait till they find me!
It will be awkward at first;
they’ll marvel, then keep away.
I won’t mind; I am at home
in my mineral skin
and not alone.
Mornings they seek me
in the sulfurous pasture,
the ones who never ask why.
I know them by their sweet breath,
their questing tongues.
I grow thin in the middle.
They have consumed my heart,
but I will become part of their flesh
and part of my people forever.
Very soon I will break in two,
my feet dissolving into this cursed
ground along with my name,
my dry eyes staring straight up
into the dry eye of God
without blinking.
Lot’s Wife
Issue 7: Gender and Sexuality