Write about me,
my wife says
as we sit out back.
I’m writing about
birds, I tell her.
She smiles and becomes
a cardinal, flies
into the maple,
chirping. I reach
for my notebook
but notice red
fledging my arms —
hop toward the tree
and cock my head,
waiting.
Around dusk, I notice
children’s excitement
aimed at the sky,
at something I’ve seen
several times during the stretch
of my own lengthening shadow.
I return to my ballgame, but
the thought of missing out
pulls at me
as the moon the ocean
and eclipses my interest in the score.
How many do I have left?
I step into crisp air
as the kids clap and cheer
the return of the full moon,
a giant pearl.
Later that evening,
I find my wife
taking a bath and ask
if she’s going to shave her legs.
She smiles, surfaces a shin and nods.
I sit on the edge of the tub and wait.
“Birds, I Tell Her” previously published by The Old Red Kimono, Spring 1992.