When the sound of life is anything before the music begins before there is time to listen; when a child coughs in the next room
I wake carefully, pressing an ear to the last beat of a dream, and find: you're not here now and you’re not in the next room.
Carriages of wind move past my window move disturbance above the pool of a tortoise who periscopes to the surface, expectant, in the least, for a gulp of air. I swim and sweat somewhere beneath my bedroom ceiling somewhere beneath the air I prefer to breath. But your not here now and you’re not in the next room.
When children sleep in the afternoon when grey breezes whisper away the sun, when an avalanche of crow-call murders the dove perched on my sill, there is nothing and none to tell and no circumstance worth repeating at a later time.