I remember you singing to yourself
in the kitchen, notes over cut fruit,
pretending yourself some
one else in need of amusement.
Boredom was dangerous
for you there. The fruit
was not fresh, it was frozen.
Its seeds were
pale things that fit under
your thumbnail.
You couldn’t throw away
dead plants
and you wondered if perhaps
this was a sign
that you would enjoy rescuing things
of little consequence.
I envied your grandmother, who
cut her wedding ring off
her finger when they began
to grow around each other.
She spoke too much
as though her weakened syllables
were shelter.
She could never
accept that her mind
could throw away
faces or voices.
She would always say
there is some resemblance
there, I see it.
You think me
some sort of disgruntled
disgraced specter that never
answers your messages.
I keep myself at bay
for you. I keep myself
whittled down to word
of mouth.
I speak and your ear
goes quiet.
You know
I am an arrogant
antidote
for forgiveness.
When we are apart
we seem to breathe
too well
for our own good.
I wish we could
curate our respirations
and hang them in a museum
for each other to view.
There, alone, with the shadows
of ourselves sleeping
we could say safely:
that exhale was from when
I first sighed, and that—
that inhale—
from when you
first laughed.
Beside the hours
that slowly fell
towards morning,
I was a tall fragment,
I blanketed your sleep
with wings of stone.
But you knew the names
of all birds and angels,
names I could only haunt,
my self a fleeting well,
your self already
drowsy with being.
You saw the day when
I would become
vividly obsolete.
How dare you tell me
my name?
Even I do not know it.
1 Comment