‘That Would Keep You’ by Jared Beloff

Healing Leaves 5
by Luz Castaneda

That Would Keep You

Lichen licks around the stone’s edge
hangs off, frayed, a torn scab whispering 
to its wounds underneath. I want to hold

your small fingers, guide your smooth hand
as you trace the rock’s ragged hem line, 
already looking away, trampling a pile of leaves 

near the trail’s thin scar, feet sliding 
gouging muddy streaks where your heels 
dug in, too comfortable in the underbrush

to tiptoe through the moment–– 
my mind turns like clouds snagged in wind. 
I imagine you happy here: snapping twigs, 

the neck of a red tanager’s song––missing, 
you slip this skulk, my eye’s pander, 
like a kit rolling a mossy rise.

Rain slips through a bed of needles,
softens the crisis of your joyful feet 
across the forest floor somewhere ahead.

Is the first tendril tunneling out from seed, 
to feel the sand and silt of loam, 
a birth or a betrayal? 

Before you traipse back, a pebble in your hand,
a smile curving your face, I feel the prick 
of catchweed and cleavers 
that would keep you.


Jared Beloff is a teacher and poet who lives in Queens, NY with his wife and two daughters. You can find his work in Contrary Magazine, The Westchester Review, Gyroscope Review and elsewhere. You can find him online at www.jaredbeloff.com. Follow him on twitter @read_instead.


Luz Castaneda was born in Brazil to Brazilian and Spanish parents. Since 2014, she has been living and working as an artist in NYC. She is a self-taught artist, a biologist, Ph.D. in Genetics, educator and researcher in the sacred language of nature. Her research and artwork are a combination of her artistic soul and scientific mind. Her art has been exhibited in multiple galleries in the United States and Brazil. www.luzcastaneda.com.