Timberwolf: Drizzle like fur on the car windows. My daughter coloring in the backseat, her monochrome of humming.
Tangerine: October leaves spilling down a hill.
Burnt Sienna: The fence along my mother’s lawn, spanning the yard like a long silence. From far off, the posts and rails look awkward and dilapidated, but closer, you see they accommodate each other.
Scarlet: Superstition, an old obstacle. Rose petals caught in sidewalk cracks.
Sea green: A twinge like the menthol of my mother’s Salems. Surplus paint in the motel halls.
Indigo: The years I vanished. Fatigue. A collapse of trust.
Butterscotch: Bored despair, drinking after bedtime.
Mahogony: The sheen of a law office table. My daughter’s braids, disappearing behind her back.
Orange: A nightlight. Penguin spines that lined the shelves along a hallway.
Copper: Flames left just terrace stones, tarnished knobs from an armoire, the lock on the bedroom chest, where the fire started.
Cornflower: I hope the words will come, like water comes.
Lemon yellow: Unripeness, disharmony. The guest who smiles too much.
Plum: A dark horse on our hill at dusk.
Ash: A litter of twigs, reading in a whisper, condolences.
Carnation pink: My daughter’s favorite crayon. It appears in all her drawings. Perfection, happiness. Just a stub now, there’ll never be enough of it.
Sunday, September 18, 2011
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2 comments:
I love this one.
good stuff. yes.
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