Like Noah’s wife I loved 
the water till it was all I had. Is it her 
voice I hear lately coming through 
the downpour calling o and o and…?
My brother thinks it’s easy 
to lose faith, underestimates 
how hard I’ve worked to get 
here. But the dove is just 
an ordinary pigeon, I remind him, 
some small dull thing sent to test 
the flood mark. I wish I had 
his gift for submission. Truth is, 
our mother’s gone and we’re 
struggling. Maybe peace isn’t 
any one thing, he offers, his face 
so lucent—like a painting of 
the Son we were raised on. 
He’s waiting now, for me 
to answer, but the rain keeps 
coming, inexhaustible as fact, 
its tears iridescent green 
and violet as a bird’s wringed neck, 
or the dress our mother loved 
but we couldn’t afford 
to bury her in. When we were children, 
she took us to a dead fountain 
where we tossed imaginary coins 
into missing water. Is it wrong 
to believe I’m due what was 
promised? I don’t have two nickels 
to rub together, but rest in the quiet 
light of that memory, as light 
rests in her final X-ray, metal
ring flaring over shadows of 
bone, there, in her still-living hand.
Shara Lessley is the author of The Explosive Expert’s Wife (Wisconsin) and Two-Headed Nightingale (New Issues), and coeditor of The Poem’s Country: Place & Poetic Practice (Pleiades). Her awards include NEA and Stegner Fellowships. She was the inaugural Anne Spencer Poet-in-Residence at Randolph College and serves as assistant poetry editor for Acre Books.



 
	 
      