After we talked that afternoon in the café, suddenly I felt shy, but mostly grateful; I hoped my recent stories didn’t sound only like overindulgence in grief— grief like a staircase I climb dumbly up and down through the day, while perhaps more tangible things happen in other rooms. The smell of citrus zest in one, the soft bleating of sheep in another. The baker stacks bread hot from the oven, every loaf bronzed like a leaf out of time. Next door, workers are patching my neighbor’s roof, before the future intrudes again in the form of a rising river, in the form of every rusted relic washing up on the beach to rebuke us. How do lovers know which way the world will tilt? Like them I only want to bend my head, follow the music with my feet.
I love this. Pardon the pun, but this sticks the landings.