Certain scents cling
to your hands, your hair,
though you've barely touched
them— citrus spray, garlic
oil. And there's the way sunlight
fills a water pitcher at the edge
of the counter— you wonder at
that kind of brightness, its taste,
how you might cup a handful
before it evaporated. There are
things whose passing you'll grieve,
sharp as a shard of laughter
floating in a hallway long
after the one who lofted it into
the air has left. Once, the shape
of the future was a mere speck
in a wilderness of tomorrows, but
now the light has shifted. Mourn
the wasp that expired to sweeten
the garden inside the fig, and also
the woolen sock whose mate went
missing. Days later, you find it
tucked into a sheet corner: a message
saying Not yet gone, not yet gone.