Debris


We slept through the lunar eclipse 

with the curtains closed and the television humming 


in the motel six, your mouth pressed

to my shoulder; you know, if it had come too close, 


too soon, the debris that formed the moon 

would have remained disparate, a floating


ring of luminous grains without the strength 

to pull the earth's tides.  But maybe I've read


you wrong.  You like heights, you say of the scaffolding 

I'd seen shivering under you, your hands steady with nail-


gun, lumber strip.  You sleep so heavily, 

but that first night you seemed to hear me worrying


over the snow on the television.  Without turning, 

you said, What is your middle


name?  When are you coming back?  I want to believe

that today when the saw's spinning hum wanes


for even a few minutes you will appear again in the dark 

tunnel of my stairwell, asking for an apple, the shine 


of your shoulders gritted with particles, your warm mouth

a press of dust.