Palmistry:  New Orleans, 1998 
"No more 'I love you's'
The language is leaving me
No more 'I love you's'
The language is leaving me in silence
No more I love you's
Changes are shifting outside the word"
                                                -A. Lenox
Had you asked on the trolley 
to the Garden District, as I listened 
to that Wiccan girl’s voodoo 
humming beside us, I 
would have nodded yes.
Yes, I love you.
I might have said meet me 
at the Lafayette #1 ‘round midnight
for some black magic loving, a necromancy
to fading love, we’ll shake it 
like those live shows down in the Quarter.
Damn this young witch, beside us
dressed in black, adorned with pentagram
reading her Book of Shadows, whispering 
her strange spells & philters while we roam 
this antiquated sprawl, reeking 
of piss & booze & jambalaya.
Perhaps she knows we’re merely ghosts
divining patterns in powdered sugar of Beignet 
at Café Du Monde muttering incantations 
among the pigeons by the Mississippi, drifting 
like the river dreaming 
of past lives.  Maybe she knows
You crave the decadent man 
you fell in love with. Maybe 
she knows I just want to belong 
somewhere, Anywhere, but we are lost
lost in this city, looking 
for a voodoo high priestess 
down by Jackson Square 
to decipher the lines
of our lives on palms, wanting 
more than ritual and offering
She notes the fan-shaped hand, 
horizontal ridges, pointed fingers
my instability, my nervousness
the curved heart line that grows steep 
The via lascivia, horizontal 
across the mount of Luna. She knows 
the crowd knows, this city knows
 
She notes the circles
On the Mount of Venus 
The fork at the end of the worry line
The lines shout 
my need, my wanting I’m unable to speak
Her eyes question me, look to you
I’m dreaming of a balmy night
A walk down by the river
The heavy scent of lantana 
on the breeze across the water carrying 
the heat from your fire inside me holding 
your strong earth hands square 
palms and short fingers lines that arch
 hoping to find a way to say, “I’m sorry” 
I’m hoping she’ll tell us 
these ghosts aren’t real, hoping she’ll tell us 
it’s not over.
                              -Kenny Harmon