I’ve been visiting again the cemetery with a sunken southern corner.
Fish smaller than first teeth, birthed from the soil, maneuver in the glaze where rain pools, covering the lowest stones.
Behind him, in a cracked white tub, my knees to his sides, left ear pressed to the stack of bones in his neck,
I was once so terrified of my own contentment I bit my shoulder and drew blood there
to the surface—past it—
What I have wanted most is many lives. One for each longing, round and separate.
Sometimes I bring figs here, asphyxiating in plastic, for their distant echo of your humid, ghost-flesh air shouldering the leaves—that almost-a-human air—
I was born in autumn as it fled underground to be fed to a body of water that only swallows.
--Gabrielle Bates
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