Once again I searched your name in a map I kept in my wallet for years. I evened out creases with my palm and calculated your distance with my fingers. Yesterday, I thought I heard your voice complaining about the heat, but it was only I realizing I was much older now than the day you died. How much longer before the monsoon? Remember how winds emptied in Caramoran? Remember how typhoons are named? Remember how we tracked the numbers as the weight of air matched the barometer of our reticence? We practiced the signals early and often, orphans before our fathers died. Number one and we weighed down roofs. Number two and we prayed to saints. Number three and we huddled in silence. We signed our last confession at dawn when the roof was blown into the sky, but in the morning the house remained a splinter from where we waved at neighbors sorting wreckage for home. Manoy, how much of memory is sorting, how much is bidding away time, and how much is dreading the rain? After a typhoon we swelled to the river. You plunged right into your mark, I aimed at murky water, trailing as I have always trailed your footsteps for six years, only to hit surface gravels. Blood flowered on mud like tendrils exquisite and terrifying. You snapped a guava branch, chewed the leaves into paste and balmed my peeled skin without reprimand or appeasement. Manoy, every now and then I searched your name in maps. Yesterday I evened out the scars on my knees, the ones you mutely tended, indelible as the mark of your absence. As the love that you could only sign in silence.