The Gray Space
Natasha Wright
Blue sky swirled with light hangs low
over mountains cast red by the setting sun,
cradling a thicket of evergreens,
the line of their heads stretching out
like the bent back of a serpent.
Neither sky nor earth is submissive;
one dies not smother the other,
leaving it to fade into the background
of its last reverberation.
Where is the separation that I heard of
with knees bent and head raised?
The middle ground that’s left for us,
the gray space owned by God
and forbidden to the creatures of below.
All I see
are the heated peaks
reaching up like the flames of hell licking each other,
carrying whispers from the lips of Lucifer
to curious angels
who wandered too far from the stars,
scorching their feathered wings
and leaving them to fall into the fire like a backwards Icarus.