Poetry |

“Messages”

Messages

 

 

The porch light shining on my bedroom ceiling

means my son isn’t home yet and the clock

glows an hour I used to rock him in my arms

with the stealth of a woven web.

 

Mom I need some advice, he texts.

Should I date someone new?

His ex-boyfriend still holds him too closely.

I encourage him to go for it. Ask him

 

what he’s afraid of. His version of afraid

is different from mine.

In the morning I listen to true crime,

walk straight into the dark woods. Going from sun

 

to shade creates an optical portal,

and I approach seeking its message.

The oval frame of hemlock needles glitters green.

A bug lands on my arm. A spider works its web.

 

The sun slants, spotlights the silken

cable — a highway between the living and the dead —

a tree with ferns growing out of its upturned

roots. My eyes adjust and I hear messages in mycelia,

 

secrets the woods don’t know are secrets.

Every busy thing, shadowed or spotlit. A son

who embraces the night the way a bat navigates

the spaces between hazards. Who used to

 

be so close to the floor he could rest his head

on the cat, his stuffed gorilla, his friend, anything

he loved that he could show his love to. I was the

milk, the kindness, the snug hip. He was piloting

black sky — a ship, newborn and polished as wet stone.

Contributor
Jessica Purdy

Jessica Purdy holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Emerson College. Her poems have appeared in About Place Journal, Gone Lawn, Radar, and The Night Heron Barks. Her two recent chapbooks are: The Adorable Knife, poems based on The Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death (Grey Book Press), and You’re Never the Same: ekphrastic poems (Seven Kitchens Press).

Posted in Poetry

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