We leave while your
chest is still rising, to watch
for signs in the canyon
of the journey you are taking alone,
without us, beyond our
touch at your bedside, beyond the
windows of your
flowered room.
The river carves its
course through desert rock,
the kind that you, from
green country, found haunting.
But it was here that we
last came with you,
and here you may be
waiting.
High above us, water
falls in pounding roars,
each ripple, each wave,
appearing only to disappear,
churning mists that
soothe our burning eyes and
haze the pain of
memory.
You once said “time
marches on” to comfort us,
but in this place of
endless time we see only the
blur of moving water,
the mystery of quiet stone.
Until the moist air
flickers:
A glimmer, green and
golden, follows the river’s edge
and hovers close, a
tiny whisper echos up the walls, and we
hear the requiem we
have come for: your last breath,
in the wings of a
hummingbird.
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