In Our Room
On the strip between the lakes
I look for some trace of you
in  everything that moves.
At the tip of its wake, a coot's
bone bill points  through
the leaves' sponged-ink shade,
slate feathers splitting the  air;
the water quivers, bright
as your bath-drenched hair
shaking off  silvered bits.
A tern pulls up, tilting
through the spreading  light,
then drops beak and body fast.
Two dark swifts dip past
swamp  oaks like brown
twilight in our room, blinds
barring your face, while your  lips
closed on some dream sound,
some word I didn't catch,
a  wood-duck's straight-seamed wedge,
a cowbird shuddering from
the lake on  loose bent wings.
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