I tried to place small white labels
on everything I remembered:
our bodies framed by sheets,
those fleeting cobblestone meetings,
your shadow.
I longed to sketch the edges
between morning and frost,
to trace letters in the shape-shifting
condensation of the grass,
to paint the strands of us –
but it was August
and the crisp stickers
peeled off your skin
like distant footsteps
of rain.
You became the shade:
expanding, dilating,
shifting with the coarse angles of day –
dripping, heaving,
leaking through my cupped hands.
So I clasped them tight
and gathered the wilting
glints that remained
into a little glass bottle
and placed it on a shelf
in a room
facing the sea
next to that piece of me
that will always be
searching for you.