• I carried the name
    before I knew what to do with my mouth.
    It lay folded in me
    like a Sabbath coat—
    itch at the neck,
    rain held in the cuffs,
    waiting.

    Among other voices—
    their quick shine—
    I learned stillness.
    How it looks like sense
    when watched.

    God did not frighten me.
    It was the faces.
    A room tightening
    as if air could be measured.

    Time wore that fear thin.
    Something else set in:
    the split—
    tongue one way,
    hands another.

    So I say the words.

    At night
    when the house gives up its heat
    and the windows tick.
    Wind worrying the frame.

    Before dawn,
    before the hills un-crease,
    before the day takes my name
    for its use.

    Often I forget.
    Hours go slick,
    quietly spent.
    Later—
    an ache,
    like a bruise found
    by accident.

    I come back by touch.

    The stair’s complaint.
    The lamp turned until it catches.
    The fridge door:
    cold light,
    a jar sweating,
    the blunt smell of milk.

    I stand there
    longer than needed.

    Our Father—

    Through the wall
    a neighbor’s kettle.
    Someone’s floorboard.
    A cough, then silence.
    The words keep going
    without me.

    Your name
    stops in my teeth.
    It has weight.
    It shakes.

    Morning arrives.
    The tap runs.
    The spoon rings the mug.
    A slice of bread
    toasts, darkens,
    gives off its small heat.
    Butter softens,
    slides.

    My hands hover,
    then open.

    Some names I cannot lift.
    Some faces stay hard.
    Here the words thin.
    I stay.

    The phone brightens
    on the table
    like a small altar.
    My thumb knows the way.
    I do not move.
    I do.
    I don’t.

    Fire is not a figure.
    It takes what it takes.
    I learn my measure
    by standing.

    Still I weep—
    not because You are gone,
    but because I am not whole.

    I bring this distance
    and set it down
    with the other things—

    keys in a dish,
    yesterday’s cup,
    the coat on the chair
    I keep meaning
    to hang.

    Let the room hold.
    Let it be enough
    to stay.

    Let breath come back
    unfinished.