The leaf cups my body
as if to say
I am enough.
Shielded from the sun,
I sleep in a cocoon
of green.
The memory of the mild
winter is faded like
translucent skin.
The mandarin tree is
my home within a home;
a human family live
in a dark box nearby
with openings
that are mostly closed.
Every morning
the train horn
b l o w s.
I know of this machine
because my mother transmitted
her knowledge through webbed feet:
our ancestors were born near the tracks.
How does it feel to be a lily pad
hanging above water?
Or a turtledove chick who dies
on its first flight
from the potted plant?
Or a squirrel who breaks
the first nut of summer?
The leaves extend my limbs
into the earth, but
no matter how grounded I am
the questions come like raindrops,
bursting into the hard, white buds
that will bring orange fruit.
