the monarch
the monarch butterfly came by our porch
every august afternoon
her wings like ashes freckled on rust
she was beautiful
and every day she saw us
she told us about her children
and their little baby wings
she told us about her heartbreaks
how the bee with the sweetest honey always stings
and on her way home, like a lullaby
to Old Friend Dusk she always sings
the monarch on our porch does not know about the moths in our backyard
flap flapping around papi’s untouched grill
over our windtorn kites
they don’t fly with grace
we hate them in their flight
we step away from the herd
the monarch’s ghost, we fear it
how could we not have considered
the moth was her silhouette?
a twin universe, a space cadet?
when it is night they meet each other
a shadow and her severed host
one lies atop the other
they are one and alone
and then they go home
Maya Olivo is an award-winning writer and published poet from New York City. Her poetic style is fabricated of a strong use of figurative language and themes of personal growth, self-reflection, and identity.