Mother told us when we were younger not to step foot into the woods or else our bodies would disappear like birch tree into morning sky.
At night in the dark with our hushed breathing lying underneath soft blue quilt and the moon pale as Mother’s face shining through the bedroom window she told us stories about wolves with teeth sharp and naked, sinister and still like a fresh mistake, or like the stories themselves, the ones that lulled us into hard-edged sleep.
Now at night in the dark with my hushed breathing lying underneath trees tall as a father I’ve never met I am breaking every law I’ve ever known, standing with feet bare and rough like the body of a toddler that’s been scratched by saltwater. Now the moon is as rough and gold as a cruel boy’s face.
Here I am breaking every law I’ve ever known but also here I no longer have a mother. Here there are finally people I can learn how to miss and the trees look more like tombstones; on one: the name of a father long gone, another: mother dead with age, a third: boy dead by drowning.
If somebody could see me now they would see the body of somebody holy, soft and aching and wrinkled.