The Risk of Us
I told you I wasn’t easy, and you
laughed. Tea in coffee shops,
a free concert in the park.
When we walked your setter,
I could be quiet, heard the jostle
of dog tags, an icy flute
from a second-floor window.
After you left my bed last night,
it rained, battered peonies flat
white petals pummeled
along the grass.
Before I slept, I heard wind-rhythms,
leaned my head against the glass.
Rain and dark allow me to steep myself
in a solitude I nurse like a vice I refuse
to vanquish.
You crack that solitude,
show me a quirky sonata
of shapes – trees through the window,
pine and aspen branch-dancing –
their gestures so different from
your fingers in the cobalt dark as you
read me pore by pore. The old light
of dying stars is enough to see by.

Melanie Perish is a gender fluid crone interested in the complexity of poetry and poets. Her work appeared in Calyx, Rust & Moth, The Meadow, Sequestrum, Persimmon Tree, and other publications. Passions & Gratitudes (Black Rock Press, 2012,) The Fishing Poems (Meridian Press, 2016,) and Foreign Voices, Native Tongues (Blurb, 2021) are her collections. She believes reading makes you beautiful.
