The In-Between
I live in the in-between,
between coming and going,
before the tide turns
and the water boils,
at the point where the wall starts to curve.
I love half-sprung fiddleheads,
cracked robin’s eggs,
and bridges,
birds floating,
not flying, above me.
I sleep in the top car
of a broken Ferris wheel —
I race away from the sun
and feel free in the fog,
at the edge of the forest
by the side of the road —
I dive into disappearing places,
the space just before bows strike violins,
swim in final notes fading,
flee as silence somersaults into applause.
* * * * *
Manus Miraculum
There’s that hand again,
bursting through the earth.
It’s in my backyard today,
but I’ve seen it in woods and parks,
even rising from a planter at the mall.
Fuchsia fingernails emerge first,
then I see the ruby ring,
finally the wrist,
adorned with gold bracelets.
The fingers stretch as tall and wide as they can
and wiggle triumphantly,
luxuriating in the air —
sometimes I wish my mother would stay dead.
Her hand vanishes as quickly as it appeared.
The grass looks undisturbed.
I claw into the lawn,
rip it up with my nails,
and cry, No, Mama. Come back!
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