Balance

I’m remembering again, the day

we stood on the porch and you smoked

while the old man told you

about his basement full of wine,

his bad heart and the doctor’s warning,

how he held the dusty bottle out to you,

glad, he said, to give it away

to someone who appreciated

its value and spirit, the years

it took to settle into its richness

and worth. I’m watching again,

each cell alive, as you reach

for the wine, your forearm exposed

below the rolled sleeve, the fine hairs

that sweep along the muscle, glowing,

lifting a little in the afternoon breeze.

I’m memorizing the shape of the moment:

your hand and the small bones

lengthening beneath the skin

as it tightens in the gripping,

in the receiving of the gift, the exact

texture and color of your skin,

and the old man’s face, reduced

to its essence. That,

and the brief second

when both of you had a hand on the bottle —

the thing not yet given,

not yet taken, but held

between you, stoppered, full.

And my body is flooded again

with an elemental joy,

holding onto it against another day

in the unknowable future when I’m given

terrible news, some dark burden

I’ll be forced to carry. I know

this is useless, and can’t possibly work,

but I’m saving that moment, for balance.