In the black coffee of night the moon pours cream through the open window above our bed and lightens the umber shadow stretching across the pale linen wall. I want to paint you, your skin canvas smooth. Your breath teases my touch as the hands and lips of new lovers do. I dip my brushes into the liquid cups of your palms, load them with color--madder rose, vermillion, scarlet, carmine deep, cerulean, turquoise, lemon yellow, burnt sienna, ebony, titanium white-- to mix and match memories. I trace the whorls of your ears. One brush fine enough to limn each lash, another of sturdy bristle to scumble in the nooks of belly and ribs. I use flats and ovals to define the arcs of your curves and wipe them clean with rags torn from sheets where we strayed. Carefully, I frame you in my arms and dry you with whispers.