Skippingstones
By Daniel Callahan
Posted on
In my backyard—at night there is a mirror—
the American river
I walked to the outcropping
where they once tried to build a bridge
Remember how I taught you to throw stones here?
The angle of your elbow
to skip the smooth rock… 1, 2, 3, 4
The ripples of each skip’s epicenter
The sky is a fusion
between the living and the dead, as the sunset
was fifteen minutes ago
Coyotes howl like a heart skipping
stones among ghosts
I feel the years of a rock worn smooth
against my fingers delicately kissing the
flesh I used to trace over your body, watching
the shadow’s outline each ripple in the unmade bed
The stone falls from my waist
I don’t care to catch it
Clank echoes as the rock abides to the law
This new stone I grab isn’t smooth at all, the edges
remind my fingers of broken glass, of
after the end of a fairytale
and is swallowed by my palm
The rawness is a challenge to skip amidst the clamor
of trees in the delta breeze, my only audience
I submarine my hand beneath the elbow
chock my shoulder
Leaves rustle in anticipation
The sky dies after I cut
the tension, flinging the stone
into mirror
broken glass cascades
down the bathroom vanity
It falls into the tops of my feet
Where I can no longer see myself
I hear all the leaves fall in applause
– Daniel Callahan