The Cameleer
By Brandon Marlon
We trail the desert veinlet
amid an elongated gorge
of sandstone, rosy and curvaceous,
until at length it depletes into a donga
as it reaches the caravanserai,
dingy and unattended,
a blessed sight for sore eyes.
I dismount to splash and gulp
with cupreous ewer chained to its fount,
then release numb limbs
on mats round glowing logs,
faint, spent, and weary,
dead to the world till moonset.
Before long guttural beasts thrum
disquiet, juddering their jowls
as they ogle stained earth,
sniffing chilly night for the fell scent
of whelps, red in tooth and claw,
gorged with blood and close by.
Fatigue dulls me to overnight howls,
though I slumber with scimitar
gripped, with one eye open,
impatient for servanted hours
when the only packs are those
borne by uniformed hamals,
and the lunar fang has long
withdrawn before daybreak’s quirt.
Brandon Marlon is a writer from Ottawa, Canada. He received his B.A. (Hon.) in Drama and English from the University of Toronto and his M.A. in English from the University of Victoria. His poetry has been published variously in Canada, the U.S., England, Greece, Romania, Israel, and India. www.brandonmarlon.com.