My neighbours drape their tulips in white sheets:
tender ghosts. She says, I can’t be judged by my past
actions. Each dogwood blossom smudged brown as if
burnt. Yet the past stacks inside me: plates, bricks, bowls.
Somehow, the redbuds remain, broken hearts crowded
on each branch like fans outside a blue stadium.
What did I know, what did I know of love when
I bent to each request like a bough caked
in ice? She was never ice. Let’s say I was kindling.
Let’s say I was a matchbook. Let’s say
it was all my fault—this freeze, the withering blossoms,
bees shivering in their hives, hungry yet
shimmering. Does that erase the past? I can’t be
an empty glass. I can’t be a broken watch.
Tomorrow the tulips, untucked from their blankets,
will gleam, like toddlers sleepy-eyed and winking.
How glad a bloom—it can’t help itself. I couldn’t stop
myself, she said that night, after she chucked
all my sentimental objects in a box: dried roses from my grandfather’s
funeral, tattering into dust. Snow falls like ash
this morning. Will next spring’s bulbs remember,
nested under soil? Does soil remember?
You can make fist after fist, but that’s not where a seed lives.
From: Vol.11 N.01 – Queering Ecopoet(h)ics
Late Freeze
by
Amie Whittemore
