Elsewhere

by Michelle Askin


What has been left is gone. 
Inside me now lives an orchard—
a blossom orchard surrounded by moths. 
There used to be you to talk to from time 
to time. We would take hold of a rained 
on branch & speak, or you 
kindly listened to me selfishly cry. 
My friend, what is the name of your city? 
I remember it now in orange lights 
from laundromats & Korean eateries,
that neon glow autumn leaf gold so wildly 
blowing along your district’s streets. 
Maybe, I lived there too once. These days 
I am forgetting so many things. 
And later, tonight in the faraway forest, 
fir trees wade in wind & hailstorm. 
I want to lick the wet moon. 
I want to never again pretend 
that I am better than I really am. 
I want to pretend I live in a rowboat 
along the flooded river— no paddles, 
just tender voices from the village’s 
red stone taverns & temples calling me home 
& candle lit signals in the upper rooms. 
I know none of this will be real. 
I really don’t deserve these things to be real 
anymore. But once you came into my room 
& you gave me swans & the swans were gorgeous
& the swans showed me how to swim— 
in heavy dark waves tremoring, 
just how to swim.

ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ the Author

Michelle Askin’s poetry and short fiction have appeared in 34th Parallel Magazine, The Tiny Journal, Pleiades, MayDay Magazine, Santa Clara Review, and elsewhere. She lives in Reston, Virginia.