Where you are now, the only lights are stars and oil lamps flaring on vine-covered porches. Where you are now, it must be midnight. No one has bothered to name all the roads that overlook the sea. The freshened air smells of myrtle and white jasmine. A church stands on the headland, and I hope it might keep one thought of me alive in your head. Autumn is here: warm days becoming cold. The trees drop more leaves, love, each time it rains. I eat my meals with the TV turned on, but softly so the neighbors won’t complain. The kilim is stained by the food I spilled the first day--and the second--you were gone.
From Tug, published by Graywolf Press. Copyright © 1999. Used with permission.