The cliff’s monumental resolve Plucks the sustained note of its rise over the wayward valley, Sound thick and heavy enough to chew, A nameless taste of memory calls to mind Seven years ago When a woman who shared my name Threw herself from the cliff, Into the snapped arms of trees below, The act of falling, monumental resolve The upward sweep of dark hair Against the grey hand of the rock.
After, my mother’s phone rang with urgent voices repeating my name as they’d heard it On the evening news Asking if it was me who had climbed the bones of the mountain, I who had stared down into the doldrum of trees, watched them float in the captive air, I who had murmured into the reticent sky And still found no answer That whispered “stay.” I, who had scraped the soft skin of my foot across sandstone With the last grounding pull And still stepped into nothing.
And when she said I had not That the name, though mine, was not mine, I heard the relief in the notes of their voices Collapsing into soft reprieve.
But I knew what it was To wonder if the plummet was like the upward flutter of coat in a draft or The cold sweep of wind across a wet finger or the warm, couching blast of a passing subway car.
And they don’t report on suicides for this reason But everyone hoped it was an accident Because accidents can be explained away As the things that pluck us up and drop us into death, But walking into death With open eyes always led to too many questions.
Someday, she and I-- our name will be said for the last time Edging on the ledge of wrinkled lips Staring into the ground below— And the syllables will hold themselves over the edge of the world And jump.
Based on a true story. A woman who shared my name died by suicide in my hometown.