Mount Mansfield
by Tragash
In the alpine tundra, needles of coniferous
limbs only reach my chest. There’s sun on a false Mans-
field summit, and my father’s sturdy hands, cramping
on crimps of mica-albite-quartz, extend and bring
him up to my bivouac. Overlapping stripes
of pink and white colored years in the rock; some blue
trail markers border the sides of our conversation.
We share the camp, sitting so we are both abreast
on the mountain. He pronounces my name correctly
and admits that his daughter was farther ahead.
My head crests, breaks surface tension. Forest
trees, leaves drinking turbid water. Two hands
unclog my ears, my lissome chest panting:
inflating crushed lungs. Atop the rush rings
my girlfriend’s laugh. She’s an igneous dyke
deposited alongside all the new
erratic. Low sky and a low bleak hill,
the sandbar of a girl’s arms. My branches
lilt through high heat and valley stretches. From
this vantage: mountains like sails glinting on water.