At 186,000 miles per second
it would take 1,200 years to travel
to the place where you wait,
sifting through the thickly matted
flora and fauna on the forest’s floor—those bones
of last year’s spring. Life as we know it requires
solid ground and liquid water, which could presumably exist
on the surface of your palms held out. Perhaps a river
or ocean—or that humid fog, a dense
cloud obscuring your face on even the brightest day.
I promise when this long night ends
I’ll do more than send these notes through the air
for you to follow in the dark toward the lake
you haven’t seen in years, the swath of rock along the water’s edge
where I search for a stone the size and shape of my heart—
small planet just close enough to the sun, our outermost
world. It is probably habitable.