the leaves sway and catch sunlight and i catch both against my cheek and chase them down to my throat, crush them into each other into me into chamomile: a trickling summer
i drown in sword-shorn grasses and in return for breath they write on my skin in languages that have never been spoken, only sung only felt only studied with one dirt-painted fingertip, fine hairs punctuating pink brown imprints of trodden earth
ants count dozens of steps, climbing the winding train tracks (and rocks sleeping beneath) of my wrists legs nose and untraveled stomach, and i let them travel; let my body be gravel become highway become interstates to ugly and restful towns diners hotels
and even as sunlight burns my eyes and bobcats stalk past forests beyond the reach of my oven-warm wind-wound open palm, ground allows its drinks to seep into my sweatpants desert skin and curls: an oasis i carry on my back