In the summer of my death the crickets


reach fever pitch in their grass tunnel where the railroad

tracks run like a spine, and in the end 


it matters only that the path

between my door and yours was worn 


threadbare, and sitting together your knee 

pressed against mine.  There was nowhere else for my hand


to rest.  Let’s forget in this murmuring river of black

legs singing that you ever said no to anything I asked,


and again, again, the repeating teeth of the tracks,

my hand laid against your spine, the fall


of your hair on my collarbone, how you said, No

I am not a body, and every time the train rages


through you are there, the ledge of your knee

and the flower of my hand spread over it, an answer 


to the question in the dark, Are you here, Are you there?

When the train looks with its one bloodshot eye in the rage


and rattle, are you still listening for me?

Sometimes you wake thinking you hear me crying, 


or laughing, but you know I am no longer 

a body.  The summer is hot with stars


and the rain still drips from strands of grass after 

the train breathes distantly, the crickets laughing in its wake.


The summer of, the summer of


my death is the crickets, the grass, the bridge

where you lay your hand.  Are you here, 


Are you there?