The most endearing,
almost enchanting feature
of my letters:
they’re never written.
Hear that? That scratching sound
is rain on leaves,
a sudden breeze,
the possums on your tin roof:
it’s not a pen.
The licking tongue,
the stamp of fingers pressing
envelopes
that’s someone else.
Relax. No postie’s walking
past your box
with mail from me.
We’re keeping nothing from you
in that sack.
Each day they’re not there,
more and more. They don’t stop
not arriving
in a flood
you slowly come to love:
an emptiness
that comforts you
each time you find them in
a heavy book,
pressed flat as flowers,
discolouring the pages,
reeking faintly.