We rode a train one-way to the ragged Atlantic,
honeymooning in February—shivered on wintry
sand. Flew home to our nest, so torrid in summer,
candles stored atop the refrigerator melted. Left
its scored linoleum floors to walk to work, passing
deserted clusters of warehouses, like old gray men
huddled together post-war, recalling black market
plunder. We lived for some fairytale to awaken.
And—in its own cycle, in its own run—as
breathing makes a chest rise and fall, rise and fall,
that bright but broken ocean, feathered ridges
whitening the shore again, remembered us.