We will live, one day, in a place with hinged doors. The chairs will not whine and the art will not be greeting cards. Our basil will all be alive.
On cold days, because we will still have cold days, we will gather three dogs around the fire and keep any sleep we find. One day,
we will not keep the rice cooker on the floor. Our bedroom will be its own room
with the right feng shui: a flat ceiling, a full wall,
no doors at our feet.
August Peaches
We must eat the peaches today for they are about to burst.
We left them like still art until they softened our longing and stored each sunset. But now, it is late summer and no one else is coming to visit.
In our palms, they crump into twice-sliced stars, pressed in on the edges, sluicing blushed juice. One brush with water might bruise its furred flesh, we might dive to kiss the counter, lick the lines on our fingers, and suck and suck every ounce oozed out. The first bite will set off its nectared geyser— bright and quick, tartsweet meteor, chasing the inch of our chins our tongues cannot reach.
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