Winter
                        
                            By Timothy Liu
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            How long will the bed that we made together
 hold us there? Your stubbled cheeks grazed my skin
 from evening to dawn, a cloud of scattered
 particles now, islands of shaving foam
 slowly spiraling down the drain, blood drops
 stippling the water pink as I kiss
 the back of your neck, our faces framed inside
 a medicine cabinet mirror. The blade
 of your hand carves a portal out of steam,
 the two of us like boys behind frosted glass
 who wave goodbye while a car shoves off
 into winter. All that went unnoticed
 till now — empty cups of coffee stacked up
 in the sink, the neighborhood kids
 up to their necks in mounds of autumn leaves.
 How months on a kitchen calendar drop
 like frozen flies, the flu season at its peak
 followed by a train of magic-markered
 xxx’s — nights we’d spend apart. Death must work
 that way, a string of long distance calls
 that only gets through to the sound of your voice
 on our machine, my heart’s mute confession
 screened out. How long before we turn away
 from flowers altogether, your blind hand
 reaching past our bedridden shoulders
 to hit that digital alarm at delayed
 intervals — till you shut it off completely.
                
                    
                        Timothy Liu, “Winter” from Burnt Offerings. Copyright © 1995 by Timothy Liu. Reprinted by permission of Copper Canyon Press.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        Burnt Offerings
                                                                                                                                                                    (Copper Canyon Press, 1995)