|  | At Savage River Lodge   Only the trees
 are raining now�
 
 the storm passed
 through the forest
 
 like a night shiver
 and was gone.
 
 Out of the dark and into it, the August sizzle of crickets.
  Wrapped in a blanket,
 I sit on the deck
 
 of my one-room cabin.
 Twenty yards away, yours.
 
 We're wise enough to know confinement sets us apart.
  Earlier tonight,
 we feasted a friend
 
 with other friends, the evening
 ample and kind.
 
 I'm pensively
 dizzy with it, and would
 
 probably have slipped into vague solitary considerations,
  had you not turned on
 a light in your cabin
 
 its glow barely
 visible through the low
 
 branches of an oak. So I
 quietly tiptoed closer
 
 to your window, bare footed
 on gravel and grass,
 
 and watched you be alone, not four feet away from me.
 Everything you did
 was unsurprising, familiar�
 
 you already seemed
 distant, self-contained.
 
 And I suddenly felt
 I was no longer there,
 
 while you went about your life without me.
  What else was there
 to do for me but to look
 
 away, and walk
 back into the dark?
     March Chimes      Day dithers, no wind or breeze, and light
 so drab it could be dawn or dusk.
 
 Winter recedes to nothing again, what's
 left of snow dull. Silent sparrows, still pond.
 
 I throw a coat over my shoulders, step
 out. How barrenness weighs�
 
 I pick up a stone, hurl it at the chimes.
 
 Their song seeds the silence, ripples
 skitter in the pond, sparrows prattle,
 
 there's a breath caught in the highest tree,
 
 and suddenly all this nothingness is alive
 with possibility, like the day I knew
 
 I was pregnant with you.
 
 And I remember it now�that void
 inside me when nothing stirred, nothing
 
 moved, my body between seasons, but drawing
 trust from patience and patience from hope.
 
 for Maelle
    Friends this is the viscous heart I hide from you:
 gnashing, polluted, hooked to my ribs
 like a burr, stuck there and stinging,
 and it�s only four fourteen in the morning.
 
 Those sudden shudders my waking alarm,
 then the daily discipline of shutting away that heart,
 shambling through the house, touching things,
 stroking their shapes as if it could help me not
 
 be the Bad Sower�s daughter each morning:
 the pit from a seed he sowed and left to parch,
 and no crows would feed on it. So I lived. I don�t
 want to explain this further, I�m done with it.
 
 But this for you: on the days I touch your books,
 read your letters, recall a gaze, the delicate
 dangle of an earring, or the throwing
 back of a head in laughter,
 
 it�s you seeding the first beat into the heart
 I open. And as the sun heaves daylight
 into the parched tree by my window,
 and rats burrow away, when pigeons come
 
 down to feed on dust and pizza crusts, I thrum
 the light syllables of your names on my sill with all
 ten fingers, typing them firmly into the brick,
 and counting their beats, counting their beats.
 |