When I Return to Your Death As a Poet
for John, ten years late
When my daughter rushes into the living room,
cheeks flushed from her wicked siblings who spring from closets
and unlit hallways, all the fear in the world blotched upon her
small round face, I pretend sometimes that her body is being driven by you,
that you have discovered a temporary passage between heaven and bone,
and when I speak to her, I am really speaking to you,
and I know we haven't much time—
my daughter is young and must return to herself.
So I speak urgently, each word a tiny grain of sand, spilling.
It won't be long before she learns to repeat our conversations,
breaking the privacy, the awkward third lover. Already she
practices whispering into her hands, stands too long
in an empty room, stares through her father at the dinner table.
Each new year I feel the mud thickening beneath my feet.
One morning she will wake up too old to remember any of this,
delivering us to your second death. I am sure I will know it
the moment it happens. The first time she comes home a few hours late,
enters the house a woman I do not recognize.
Copyright Credit: Rachel McKibbens, "Where I Return to Your Death as a Poet" from Pink Elephant. Copyright © 2009 by Rachel McKibbens. Reprinted by permission of Cypher Books.