until I watched her at low-tide, I never
believed
she could pull water from the rocks
until I walked to the shore at dawn, and
found her moon-lonely, floating
above the empty remnants of a river once home
to a town-full of
baptisms,
until erosion turned her cheeks to
aqueducts, pouring herself back into
holy
until she looked at me and asked
if I thought they would notice that
from now on the Mississippi would be salt water,
until I looked into her eyes, hollowed and
cored and caved, and
all of the things I had drowned or orbited
in her over the years was looking back
at me
I didn’t know that running
just leads
to caught