Skip to Content

Peach's Untold Tale -

The orchard knew secrets the wind could not carry. At night, when the pickers slept and the moon polished each leaf to silver, the peach would listen. It heard the plum’s envy across the row (“You’ll be held like treasure. I’ll be jammed into darkness.”). It heard the apple’s crisp arrogance (“At least I travel well. You bruise if someone dreams too hard of you.”). The peach said nothing. It was too busy ripening—a slow, dangerous magic.

Then came the hand.

The peach understood, in its final hours, that being eaten is not a tragedy. It is an intimacy. The poet bit down, juice running to the wrist, and for one messy, sun-warmed moment, the untold tale ended not in silence—but in a gasp of sweetness that tasted exactly like having mattered. peach's untold tale