I had dreams of Utah or Minnesota, though I've never been anywhere close to either.
I dreamt of the endless fields and their waving grains and the tendrils of tree limbs aching outward, towards the sun, when it bothers slipping by.
I dreamt of women in black shirts tending bars, and escaping from the seventy-dollar buses hiding behind green blocks all corrugated and spry, when she'd take strangers to bed in abhorrence of the quiet of sleeping to the sound of no other's breath. For all her strength she still lay meekly, wondering when completion would creep by and slip between the bedsheets with her; he did, and she smiled.
Her own heart, swollen, still questions, however, if she should have taken the lover who'd found light the first second he met her. But she's no clue of the words in his head, 'cept hazy glimmers in late-night rendezvous when they once were lonely, out on the driveway where life stirs once per millenium, where love lies sleeping under the clarity of stars some nights when I wish I'd not gone and left your island, your pocket of silent faith waiting to happen, but I held the seeds under ground within the winter of my heart.
My toepads glide along crushed glass in mysteries as the dawn breaks upon the horizonline, the twisting of orange-lit pale gold salmonflesh torn cirrus, sprayed across the sky and over the sea's edge I yearn for so late in the distance.
And it all just keeps coming back to this:
When we lay in breath harmonics as humanforged dust found its way through your eyelids, I was screaming of words, never even muttered, in mine; the straight gaze and your slipping eyelashes made morse signals that I would never decode. Downstairs in the kitchen in a haze you said tiny words; the ones I could never champion, and for once I believed it and so left for your sweet smile's sake.