you don’t enter rooms
you adjourn them,
quietly
soft-voiced, spine straight,
as if composure were something
you tailored yourself
between depositions
and whatever you refuse to name.
there’s a discipline to you
that borders on disappearance.
i’ve watched you
tilt your head
just enough to listen
just enough to measure
never enough
to be read back into evidence.
your kindness is exacting,
footnoted,
without precedent.
we speak in margins
briefs kept brief,
a chat box flicker
filed under nothing to disclose.
you keep the record narrow.
i keep the excess
off the page.
still—
there are moments
that almost overrule themselves,
then don’t.
so we proceed
as if that’s the point
signal without statement,
precision without proof,
a case built carefully
on what neither of us
moves to admit—
or dismiss.
Valerie Frost lives in Central Kentucky with her three joyful kiddos. Her poems have appeared in Eastern Iowa Review, ONE ART, Eunoia Review and elsewhere.
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