the rainstick is home-made from second grade when they tried to make us cultured and the paper towel tube it is constructed of is frayed at either mouth and peeling along the sides. the construction paper that closes it is fading started fading some time ago from all those days spent on your shelf and when you held it in your hands i remember the way you knuckles looked like little brass doorknobs all smooth and polished
i remember your sand dune curves and how my fingers used to be the Sahara desert wind sliding along the grains and making small dips and dents in your pliable softness those same curves could stop wars and end world hunger i was sure of it and hardly a day went by when i neglected to tell you that
you once gave me a journal that was leather bound with creamy pages whose grey lines begged to be set under a fountain pen and even though you knew that i only liked my work when i wrote about you, on the inside cover you scribbled: for the days when i am no longer beside you— they will come. they will come
the only love song i have ever enjoyed is the sound of april showers whose droplets fall gently on the roof like the landings of a million experienced parachuters because it reminds me of the rain stick which you left on my bookshelf on your way out