Thrashers and cardinals dart
through the brush, through
the season. Trees begin their
letting go as we walk
along the Depot Trail.
Bikers and runners pass like pearls
stringing us to this wild
chandelier of a plant—
magenta stalks, purple-black berries.
Cartoonish. Overripe.
Poke salad, you call it. Toxic.
Yet you crush a few
between your fingers,
streak them under your eyes
like war paint. A boy again,
unafraid.
For the rest of the day I live
inside that gesture, a small delight
in the age of grief.
Runners waving
good morning, a fawn
feeding in the woods, a black cat
crossing the path.
Weed of old spells
and sweet poison
keeps me from myself,
from the thing that calls me
to sorrow.
I must have called to it once,
to its yellowing
heart-shaped leaves,
and it remembered.


























