Maria Gray
Sea Level
You bit your nails to bone
that summer. It was the year of homemade bombs
and your bullshit bank teller job, snipers on the roof
of the Hilton Garden Inn. You hugged me, but
your face was hard
when I saw it. Bituminous. August
in my rented backyard. The bees are dying in waves
but that day, there were so many. In your final city,
the spines of streetlights melt,
scoliotic, into the sidewalks. Soon,
the experts drone, this place will be uninhabitable.
I have forged an island
atop your absence. Each day I wake
closer to sea level. It was never supposed
to be like this. You’re dead; I’m
reading Rilke on the roof. Night rises
like heat from the sidewalk. The expressway glares
back at me in heterochromic beats, red, white, red,
white, cells of blood, breathing. I don’t write
these days. God can’t love you
the way I do, will never know you
like I know you. You’re a casual fan of the future
but you don’t want to live there, like a city you know
is too dirty, too busy. Living fossil,
fata morgana, I told you the truth. This world a sum
of all I’ve lost and all that’s left. This emptiness
Oulipan. You’d rather die
than live with it.
In this alone we differ.
