The woods are unfriendly in the spring–
they strangle and obfuscate with their
vines
and branches. Strangers lose their way
when last autumn's fallen leaves revive
and tumble onto the trail
to make it disappear.
I've lost myself here before, and
you were lost too, but we did not
call each others' names – no. No
lost children were scampering about
these woods. We were only wanderers–
specks of flesh and cotton amid a
ubiquitous verdant haze.
We stumbled serendipitously into a
clearing.
The vines wore you beautifully, but
the leaves clung only halfheartedly to
me.
I remember the way your voice chirped
and soared as you romanticized the sky
and whispered about your closest
secrets.
The color of your world bewildered me,
as I spoke only of the ground and the
things
that lay beneath our feet. But we were
not
so different, not so distant, for the sky
would be no sky without an Earth from which
to see it, and the Earth would be no Earth without
stars for which to aim.
would be no sky without an Earth from which
to see it, and the Earth would be no Earth without
stars for which to aim.
You stayed with me, through passing
hours and taught me how to watch the
clouds
rolling by. You, a stranger, raised
your hand
with mine in its grasp and traced the
outlines
of tree trunks and jagged rocks around
us.
We saw night lurking on the horizon,
and though I worried, you minded not.
The way out, you assured me,
had to be around this tree or through
these bushes, but this forest kept well
its secrets. So we settled for the
impending
evening, and traced pictures in the
stars
until the moon bade that we slumber.
You disappeared when my eyes had
shut, though I could still hear you
breathily
lamenting the plight of our stars,
forever
immobile and unreachable.
At last we drifted into dreams, though
who
first entered, I remember not. I danced
with you,
stranger, atop the forest's canopy, and
I wonder
with whom you might have danced behind
closed
eyes.
A tender requiem of rain awakened me in
the haze
of dawn, and you had disappeared –
slipped through
the spaces between my fingers like so
many sparkling
droplets of rain.