at the Aquarium.
Pointless,
this cylindrical
tank. Arms unthread
bolts, unlatch
from within,
emerge at
will.
The only answer:
to be so
good, the otherworldly
wants
to stay. But, as
earth nears
the space
where my father left, Kong
will be bred
and then
let loose under the piers
to build her first den,
lay her eggs and
die— become
flotsam
again.
Last week, my son
pulled
the ribbon
from his wrist,
released his balloon, its green, copper-based
blood, a kiss
blown to
gravity.
Each
memory has
dozens
of suction discs,
chemo-
receptors, three known dimensions.
There was no time, even,
to reach for it.
We just stared into the sky,
watched
the rubbery skin
pass quickly from fingertips to windloss to a single
rising droplet,
then, comma with
no handle, finally,
just a place unmarked.
We kept losing sight, then finding, we thought, the spot,
then searching, again, for a footnote. That
we
might mean
all
is not gone,
even when all is
lost.