【Written by Caroline Richards】
My hands are wrapped in hair
of railroad vine and golden shower,
but the soil of you is all over and in-between
the garden troughs.
I pull raspberries from their cupped resting place
and remember the cruel pomegranate.
Stem-throat and meniscus-tongue that whispered
bullet wood, monkey pistol, strangler fig.
Then lips like sand grains in my bed, phantom-hands
I found stealing petals from my flowers—
rootless, ruthless thing
I called you. Crowned and dead-headed.
I could have loved you if not for this unbidden
darkness, this shadow-life of above.
Even Time, our bitter anesthetic, could not stop
the way I died as you grew.
Now the raspberry runs down my wrist
as though it is fleeing my grasp, its redness
I can only see as fleeting. On my fingers
I’ll count the days.