You complain that your fingers ache
from the stiffness of new clothespins.
The spring coils are stubborn and the wood
is slippery. They grasp the hems
like toothless mouths and you find yourself
chasing colors to the ground. Parachutes
opening at the very last second.
You say that you like watching the fabrics
open like sails in the early evening breeze.
They flap and make you think of wings treading
air. You'd like to be a blue button
clinging by threads to an ever changing
landscape. All three grams of you could
anchor into a wrinkle canyon.
I won't even tell you
that we don't have a clothesline.