• The room is a womb of heat—
    breath without questions,
    milk-set, conscience-clean,
    cupping us in its palm
    as if the fall were forgiven
    before the slip of the hand.

    Beyond the balcony’s blink of glass
    winter keeps its stern religion:
    frost sewing scripture
    on iron rails,
    ice glazing the square to relic,
    the day held fast,
    a saint pinned in cold.

    There—
    a playpark of metal ribs
    where bodies lift
    their daily courage,
    hoisting ordinary halos,
    pulling skyward
    as if blue were a bar
    that might yield to faith.

    They do not know I watch,
    memorising motion
    the way you learn a face
    for the last time—
    eyes drinking
    what time will steal.

    A pigeon, at my height,
    builds without pause:
    twig to twig,
    no question asked,
    the calm arithmetic
    of here.

    I envy that grammar—
    the bone-true knowledge
    of standing,
    of circling back
    to where the body fits.

    Germany,
    you make no soft promises.
    Your light is pale, mineral,
    trained to survive.
    Your dark keeps history close,
    teeth quiet,
    never dull.

    I love your language—
    hinged, load-bearing,
    words that carry weight
    and do not bow.
    A culture unthinned,
    edges kept sharp,
    streets honest
    even when the cold
    refuses charm.

    My family sleeps here,
    not in a clean line
    but scattered
    like nails in old beams—
    rusted, still holding
    the house I lived inside
    before I knew its name.

    Now the hour knocks.
    Checkout at eleven.
    As if a clock
    could loosen this,
    as if time came
    jingling keys.

    Between eleven and four
    is a room with no furniture,
    where waiting hums
    and the body
    has nowhere
    to place itself.

    I am asked to leave
    a room still warm with me.
    That is the ache—
    not departure,
    but kindness
    that does not resist it.

    I am braided
    into this ground,
    no passing thread—
    roots finding water
    and refusing disguise.
    A tree lifted whole,
    boxed and billed.

    Shipped—
    as if breath were light,
    as if roots made no sound
    when torn.

    I return to a country I know,
    a place that holds me
    by habit and bone.
    Still,
    something there will hunger.
    Something will harden
    to a slow, metallic taste.

    The body learns injustice early.
    It tightens
    long before the mind speaks.

    My partner is here.
    My friend.
    They plan,
    as the living do.
    I love them.
    That is not in doubt.

    The wound is elsewhere.
    It is shaped like a map.
    You can leave people gently.
    You cannot leave a place
    that has learned
    your name.

    Belonging arrives
    before permission.
    Love does not
    issue papers.

    Now I stand
    in the seam—
    warmth behind me,
    winter rehearsing its grip.
    The self thins,
    static
    at the edge of signal.

    The airport waits,
    white-throated,
    corridors clean as mercy.
    Lives emptied into trays—
    keys, belts,
    small forbidden waters—
    as if nothing essential
    might be taken.

    Outside,
    the swing creaks.
    The pigeon counts.
    The ordinary
    continues.

    Soon the door will close.
    Soon the key will cool
    in my pocket.
    Soon the air
    will take command.

    For one last breath
    I stand at the glass
    and let the city
    cup my face
    in winter light,
    letting myself be known
    by what I am losing.