Oh please
I haven’t died yet at the hands of autumn, those death hands made of fragile leaves. Brittled and then wetted. I come offering lamb. A curry of colors; mustard, dusted pinks, a violet so muted it is made of flour and lilac. I used to love being strangled. Patchworks of lichen lining my oak throat. I can sing two songs, one a lullaby, one a murder ballad. The imprint of my body marks the barn. My splintered back is a mark too, your love in wood, the thinnest form, always. If you dig up this earth, you’ll find me. My face in the mud, small animals denned in my stomach. The moon cannot reach me with her unreasonable call towards romance. The silliness of spring, I reject thee. I drink from the base of a tree, suck roots with my mycelium mouth, transport stories from one alder grove to another. Everyone knows now that trees talk to each other, even this mystery becomes clichĂ© on my old tattered dress. I have nothing left to reveal. Look at the cricket body. It hangs from the window by a thread, the spider approaching. A bird will not retrieve it. We must wait for winter to wash it away.