I thought how you thought of yourself as the moon—
brilliantly white light,
a dot of hope in eternal black.
But even your light wasn’t yours.
Reflection.
And the howling
below—that was real.
Lobo, me.
Smooth surface.
You could trick yourself
into seeing a smile there.
But the truth:
scars skip the surface,
sink steeply—pieces of mountains
that, without an atmosphere,
are allowed to crash into you.
No choice.
And I did.
But spinning,
the marking of time,
rotations,
smooth scars.
Cover them.
Or, from afar, make smiles.
Too hard to hide,
so we hide the scars
behind a face
and call it meant to be.
And we say
you
are the better for it.
But the moon
should be orange or red,
like the sun of Stephen Crane—
and hang,
a verdict already passed.
A blood wafer:
communion—body, blood,
death and redemption in one.
The real light,
not against the contrast of night,
but struggling
to separate itself from its own sky.
A difference
harder to make
when it’s just there
and you can’t stare
for fear of going blind.
So you work,
head bent,
and take the heat.
Sweat. Repent.
Under the anvil
of the light.


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