Reedy Creek Drive, Late Spring
this morning the air is thick with rain.
the irises bow their violet heads
and the maples graze the earth with heavy arms
as though bearing the weight of the water
before it falls.
this old brick house was not always so quiet.
not so many years ago, there was a clockmaker and his wife
at this kitchen table, two cats at their feet
lapping milk from porcelain bowls.
and there was me, lone granddaughter,
tearing through toaster waffles with my baby teeth
while the squirrels muddied their feet in the flower beds
just beyond the window.
i took my sweet, syrupy time
for the possibility that the freckled fawn
might come padding out from the edge of the woods
before i finished my breakfast.
never did i step off that porch
without an ice cream sandwich in my belly
and a fistful of grape hyacinths.
yes, this was a home, once.
today, though
the house feels more like the hollowed out skin of an orange.
the grandfather clock’s irregular chime
settles over my family like ashes,
everything an admonition of time’s unwavering hand:
an expired bag of sugar yellowing in the cabinet,
mom making the bed in her childhood room,
a circular refrigerator magnet reading
Ride to End Alzheimer’s, 2023.
together we wrap ourselves with the promise of paradise
as with a quilt, hold our breath at the kitchen window
like children, waiting for the white undertail of the deer
to pierce the fog.
one day we believe we will wait no more.
one day the grandfather clock will again chime
and the milky body of the doe will descend her hill
with heaven on her back;
in that golden hour the irises will lift their heads
and the maples will clap their hands
and from every shadowed valley of every mountain
there will be music
for the long-awaited marriage of the dust to its Designer.
until then, we wait,
some days with our knees in the soil,
others with our noses pressed against the cold glass,
every memory clutched to our chests
as the blue song of the rain
crescendos all around.