It’s quiet here. The cats sprawl, each in a favored place. The geranium leans this way to see if I’m writing about her: head all petals,, brown stalk, and those green fans. So you see, I am writing about you. I turn on the radio. Wrong. Let’s not have any noise in this room, except the sound of a voice reading a poem. The cats request The Meadow Mouse by Theodore Roethke. The house settles down on its haunches for a doze. I know you are with me, plants, and cats—and even so, I’m frightened, sitting in the middle of perfect possibility.