Born the same day, less
than an hour apart, the lovers
ask each other, Are you me?
The universal ancestor of all
life on earth was only half alive,
and yet here we are, alike and thrumming.
The lovers love papercraft, love
turning two dimensions into three
and dream of four, of tesseracts
and helical tesseracts somehow,
impossibly, unspooling. Imagine how
DNA would evolve in the fourth dimension.
I bet you can’t. I know the lovers
can’t, yet they wish to dabble with time,
even if it threatens their shared identity.
They’re willing to sacrifice
incidentals if it means they might
turn a paper cake into something greater,
puzzling and intangible, like pure
form. How does another dimension affect
a relationship? The empath can tell you
what connection feels like, and
it’s directional: a magnetic field, a strand
of nucleic acid. We are and are
not one. We are and are not
two. The lovers love to imagine all
the possibilities they will and will not be.
Brianna Noll is the author of The Era of Discontent, forthcoming from Elixir Press in 2021, and The Price of Scarlet, named one of the top poetry books of 2017 by the Chicago Review of Books. Poetry editor of The Account, she lives in Los Angeles.