Wednesday, August 15, 2018

The Woman Who Camped Alone

The drooping

Stars and Stripes,

newspaper-sized,

yellowed by time,

sticks in the Maple,

a reminder

like a note on a fridge.

Perhaps, she recalls

when they sat by the fire,

eyes in magazines,

compatible and content.

Does she pine each time

she pours the coffee

or stirs the stew,

smells

that hint

of Sage?

"Everything

in our life

was spiced

just right."

At night

she lies

tent-less,

head propped up

in the back

of a Subaru,

her face painted

Billy Holiday blue

by the light of a lap-top

she pounds upon,

hopeful,

excited, even,

like an astronaut

ready for take-off

or a Heaven-lusting poet

writing sonnets

to the other side.




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