Salvation, by Kim Sunée

Les Îles Du Salut, French Guiana

I watch you climb the coconut tree with such speed and precision, reaching 

far and high for the perfect fruit.

You return to me, proud, and bare-chested

the thump of your two bare feet as they land and kick up dirt.

You wanted to taste the Salvation Islands.

I have set out aurora bouillon and market chicken splayed on sugar cane 

spit-fired, warm and tender.  We eat with our hands

silently, overlooking Devil 

and Resurrection.  

We have understood that here we have no control over time or light.

We sleep when the sun sets, balancing ourselves in our hammocks

without netting, offering our flesh to the fat, greedy mosquitoes.

It took us a week to learn that we had been sleeping in it the wrong way.

But even the right way doesn’t help as we turn away from the howl 

of yellow-pawed monkeys screeching 

into the night.  Ghost calls in this former penal colony.

And everywhere, ants thick as thieves carry 

sturdy leaves and dirt, marching on, daring us to step in their path. 

These last two nights are the most terrified I’ve ever been.

We have learned to drink from the twisted limbs of the liana 

and cut deep into a palm to excavate the pale fibrous heart.

We ran through a rainstorm, tripping over tree roots

thick and winding, or were they elapids and vipers?

This morning, something feverish caused me to stir

just in time to blink open to a yellow-leg centipede

slither toward my face, daring me

to stop it.  Instead I stare, paused by its beauty

terrified of its venom.  You nudge me, gently

on the ankle, from your own hammock and point

to the cascades we hadn’t seen when we arrived late

under a moonless sky.  Our last one before we go our separate ways.  

My tongue remembers

the heat of last supper’s hot peppers, 

tiny marbles of dazzle and danger

that I’d swallow again and again

whole like the full force of the falls.

 

These last two weeks are the most alive I’ve ever felt.