You think it will never happen again. Then, one night in April, the tribes wake trilling. You walk down to the shore. Your coming stills them, but little by little the silence lifts until song is everywhere and your soul rises from your bones and strides out over the water. It is a crazy thing to do— for no one can live like that, floating around in the darkness over the gauzy water. Left on the shore your bones Keep shouting come back! But your soul won’t listen; in the distance it is unfolding like a pair of wings it is sparking like hot wires. So, like a good friend, you decide to follow. You step off the shore and plummet to your knees— you slog forward to your thighs and sink to your cheekbones— and now you are caught by the cold chains of the water— you are vanishing while around you the frogs continue to sing, driving their music upward through your own throat, not even noticing you are something else. And that’s when it happens— you see everything through their eyes, their joy, their necessity; you wear their webbed fingers; your throat swells. and that’s when you know you will live whether you will or not, one way or another, because everything is everything else, one long muscle. It’s no more mysterious than that. So you relax, you don’t fight it anymore, the darkness coming down called water, called spring, called the green leaf, called a woman’s body as it turns into mud and leaves, as it beats in its cage of water, as it turns like a lonely spindle in the moonlight, as it says yes.