The morning moves like a memory,
air thinning into a brittle hymn —
autumn sharpening its breath
into silver teeth.
I walk through a river of fog,
each step swallowed by damp velvet,
worlds folding inward like pages;
my heartbeat muddled, buoyed.
Leaves, hushed as drowned birds,
etch dark maps on the wet ground.
A distant rooster sounds like a clock
ticked under water.
My coat gathers ghosts of the mist;
each exhalation dissolves
into something that remembers
how to be alone.
Between the trees, a pale light
bleeds like an old secret,
and for a long slow moment
the world is neither gone nor here.
