What Follows Is a Reconstruction Based on the Best Available Evidence
Let me tell you, dearest beloved, in the only way I ever could—
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This failure of tongue: the bloom of hunger when morning becomes the skin—
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You walk to a mirror & never see yourself—
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Have you ached for the world? You stare back into me until I exist—
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again as a face filled with the swollen quiet of a sky locked in another decade—
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& I’ve opened every window you shattered here with the hush of a mother
who named you—
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after nameless meadow, I hear tekín’me c’íxc’ix clearing away the remains of
a summer’s harvest—
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a life: the fruiting shadow of a bitterroot seared to earth by your god mouthing
líw líw—
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-’ce: the history of our bodies is proven wrong in the flicker of an eyelid—
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Holding steady, my fingerprints stain like cracks—
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like the briefest coffins opening their lids, revealing only—
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eyes that want nothing but the day-
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light now rimming around each shut door in the house—
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But here’s the poem again, my beloved: the poem will end, I promise, & life
will—
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go back to how it always was: before you—
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ever looked in the mirror & forgot me breathing behind its melting tile of
winter—
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Look. The kitchen table is ready for you—
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Your son is in position—
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to smile as wide as the tire swing he lifts his legs up from to gather & thrust
to the air—
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She leaps into the amber of an afternoon gashed with breathing holes—
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What, Lord, am I doing bearing the back of a mirror no one asked for?
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Tell me anything, like—
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hitxlic’áasa ’ee & these scraps of flame are landing on you, scattering over—
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you, exploding—
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Is this the sound of failure, the very beginning, or the faintest celebration
of forever?
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Say láatis. pipísnim c’íxc’ix. Say yoqóx like a distant spring in another
version of this nation. Listen—
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Hear my fingerprints dissolve—
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into the unspeakable names of animals stampeding until—
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they vanish, until they are looking for you—
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God, I promised this poem would end—
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God, I’m only human enough to swallow what your season must offer—
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You walk toward me, the entrance wound between us still fresh as a welcome—
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but I am no longer there.
Source: Poetry (December 2019)