by Megan Merchant
The rain sheets. Mud lips over blacktop,
washing out our road.
I wake before he stirs, before he warms
an arm around my ribs, adds breath
to this hour in which I am leaning
against in order to forgive.
I crack an egg and in it
a spider,
a sprig of aster,
a split-yolk moon.
I whisk each omen until it yellows—
a bruise where blood
pooled weeks before,
but has hued toward healing.
From my window, an unkindness of ravens
slink between branches.
They hold out for a softening,
or opening of light,
their black feathers show no hint of damp,
no heavy, or glisten.
1 comment:
Beautiful. It fills my morning. Thank you.
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