Friday, July 6, 2012

Glacial Erratics


Wind-plucked cherry blossom petals gently scour
the asphalt beneath our feet, filling the potholes
and ruts with pink confetti. We veer off the street,
and slip through the unchained gates
of Lone Fir Cemetery, where sparkling sap decorates
the furrows of the cedars, showers of white resin
like frozen waterfalls, explosions of glue.
This past December, we both realized
we were no longer willing to live immobilized
in one another’s amber. And so we separated.

But now that spring has arrived, we stroll amicably
through the grassy halls of the petrified library
with its granite tomes arranged in rows,
volumes of sealed-shut history 
with spines bookmarked by pebbles,
black covers etched with frosted head shots
grinning and scarred with milky splatterings
of hardened tallow.
We skirt the dusty gardens of artificial flowers,
pause before the plastic dinosaurs awaiting the next meteor
at the foot of a child’s tombstone. 
We salute the headless cherubs, swat paths through clouds
of April no-see-ums. I catch a ladybug,
then uncurl my fingers to release it. The insect huddles
in the dry riverbed of my heart line, unwilling to depart
until I flick it from my palm.

We will not grow old together. We will never again sleep
beneath the same headboard. Our names will not share a slab
like the one you stubbed your toes against
the first time we ventured here, the first time I reached
for your hand. That fragrant night, you wore open-toes shoes
to show off your pedicure, the shiny pink petals
distracting me from noticing
the sluggish river flowing around us, the flood rising
as slow as chiseled names eroding from stone. 

This sunny afternoon three springs later, 
no longer trying to impress anyone,
you’ve traded your pumps for a pair of old Chucks
as we zigzag between the concrete obelisks,
pausing on a gentle swell to see where we have found ourselves,
two ill-fitting pieces of rock carried for hundreds of miles
and pages, and days in one other’s company,
now finding ourselves freed,
like boulders stranded when the ice recedes,
savoring the gentle warmth of the interglacial sun.

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