Michael Lee
And what does it mean
 when you and your love sleep
 
 in the same bed for the last time
 and you lie awake not saying anything
 
 because you know it,
 and maybe if you never sleep
 
 you will never wake,
 and the birds won’t
 
 sing and the sun won’t
 know to rise and you won’t
 
 ever be alone again, or at least
 not any more alone than you are now.
 
 And what does it mean
 when you can feel her body
 
 only a foot from your own,
 but you are certain if you reached
 
 out for her arm or cheek
 you would not find anything
 
 but the sheets, still warm,
 and no matter how close she gets
 
 to you now, she will always be out of reach,
 and what does it mean when, finally,
 
 you fall asleep, and both awaken
 to a gunshot in the dark—
 
 like a single string
 in the instrument of night
 
 had snapped—
 and she crawls into your arms
 
 for protection—but of course not the real kind,
 because that bullet, if aimed at you,
 
 would have gone through you both—
 and what does it mean when you realize
 
 that’s all love is, a small, and feeble shelter 
 from the inevitable?
 
 From bullets and time,
 from rain, and also drought, and
 
 if the bullet were just a tool of grammar
 in the language of the unspeakable,
 
 would it not be a conjunction,
 would it not be the word “and”
 
 for doesn’t it connect us
 to the only two worlds we know? 
