He watches soundless television;  
mornings are late to catch his  
early waking. The prayers are  
offered in even silence of equal  
parts of night graduating into day.  
It isn't about listening, but reading  
lips to hear what voiceful words  
don't say. And his eyelids don't close  
over iris of light, so it's hard to know  
if he has walked through into  
his world. Once, a man throttled  
him in his dream and all he could
manage was a gasp weak as a tide  
under a low moon. As hard as it is  
for his fingers to roll counting  
beads as a way to swim forward,  
he has seen large flames lick walls  
of a masjid's circumference. He came
back home that day with camouflage  
clotting his veins, and his mouth  
moving to the rhythm of his eyes.  
He trods like the fin of fish; weight,  
measure of inversion. Nobody knows
he stopped hearing for years.
* Previously published at Uppagus