My father is dying. I cannot breathe.
He is leaving home, and I now must try
to close the door and lock it with his key.
He no longer inhabits the moth-wing
pages from the book of childhood, but travels
beyond the door, inside the past, concealed
behind the rack of clothes, the story’s attic,
the place he would describe before I fell
asleep. The book lies open on the pillow.
I shut my eyes, try to count stars or stairs
climbing always beyond reach. It’s too soon
for him to leave. I still must learn to place
one foot before the other and to wake
the words from sleeping letters, so I wait
for him to read the book. When day turns dark,
the key revolves, and he, with bear-tight arms,
catches me all in air—I ride his shoe
across the wood to the unending hall.
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