• Snow doesn’t fall.
    It’s already there—

    mouth,
    lashes.

    No sky.

    Only the moment
    attention loosens
    and something slips in.

    I’m looking for the cell.
    Or remembering
    that I was.

    Someone said here
    and I started walking.

    A plaque.
    I read it twice.

    A brother.
    A number.

    Prayed.

    The rest won’t stay.

    The wall is gone.
    I expect it
    behind me.

    Stones scattered—
    thought abandoned.

    One is warm
    in my hand.

    This is how I know
    I’m here.

    The shape remains:
    rectangle,
    hesitant corners,
    a floor that won’t agree.

    The doorway
    never learned
    to close.

    I remember kneeling—
    no,
    the idea of kneeling.

    Snow lands
    and decides
    this is ground.

    Time tangles.

    I try to arrive sooner.
    I’m already late.

    I say silence.
    My breathing answers.

    No chants.
    Moss.

    A corner
    that smells recent.

    Someone was here.
    Or I will be.

    The place
    does nothing
    with me.

    It lets me stand
    the way sleep does—
    sudden,
    without reason.

    I try to pray.

    Nothing.

    Only my throat
    tightening
    around expectation.

    Snow touches my sleeve.
    Gone.

    The stone is still warm.

    I turn it over.
    I don’t remember
    picking it up.

    If there was a monk,
    I can’t use him.

    Every time I try,
    he becomes
    an explanation.

    The stone cools.