Colleen Coyne

The Mystic, Again Sick

I believe
you believe,

is that enough?
We read the cards

together. Prop her head
with pillows, bring her

some water. Crown this last hour
with seeds of supplication. I promise

to forgive you, if you
remember I was here.

St. Teresa of tiny
plumes and thorns, dig

into the heart that beats
more faintly each time you

press your small ear to hear
it calling. Make me

like you (the heart or
the body—or

better, both)
or as I am,

let me be. My own
knowledge of it,

the voice that tells me not to listen
unless the words are in her blood,

unless my oath is fire.
In October, we celebrate

our graves and water
our dead.

Colleen Coyne is the author of two poetry chapbooks: This Document Should Be Retained as Evidence of Your Journey (Jacar Press) and Girls Mistaken for Ghosts (dancing girl press). Her work has appeared in DIAGRAM, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Sou’wester, and elsewhere. She lives in Massachusetts, where she is an associate professor of English at Framingham State University, and she travels frequently to explore historic cemeteries, national parks, and other sites of memory.