Bourne by Judith Skillman
When the Cherry rustles above her head she hardly realizes why she leaves her clothes on the rocks,
passes a hand absently through water as if smoothing an infant’s forehead. Instead she takes the fruit
pressed into her hand and watches the bloody stone wet her fingers. Wasn’t sweetness always a symbol for their falling.
She walks with the man along the river bank until they come to know the sore places in the soles of their feet,
the fish knifing away. Under the currents every death moves in time towards them, each cliché is soothed into language as if there were no way to limit Paradise, other than this that has already happened.
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