The oranges are heavy on the tree again,
finches scolding from the eaves, and
paper wasps reclaiming their favorite homes.
The light has shifted, taken on
the astonishing luminance prized by artists,
breathtaking, impossible to leave.
And I stand here, alone, in this empty house,
floorboards echoing with your footsteps.
And I doze in the room where you worked,
bathed in aqueous light, and sense you,
bent over your desk, pen scratching.
And, in a moment, you will call my name
ask for help with your phone, or your nemesis,
the printer, still glowing —
a pale blue heartbeat in the darkness.
Certain things I do not talk about now:
The unused coaster where your wine glass
once rested
Those Halloween pumpkins you insisted
we didn’t need as we teetered on the final step
of childhood
The shoes, the socks, the sweaters you wore
to shreds without complaint, so we might have
the opportunities you believed we deserved
And how, when someone tore a hole
in the universe, you were there to help mend it.
Perhaps it would never again be complete,
and ease was years away, but not knowing that,
we forged on with nothing but your seam
of crooked stitches to prevent all the starlight
from trickling away.
These and other things I do not talk about.
They were ours. They were yours,
fragile dreams I hold close, guarding against
time’s inevitable erosion.
Now, again, the oranges are heavy on the tree.
You are not on your way home to us,
but you are home.
A veil of spring rests lightly on the land.
You will not bustle in scattering coats and papers
and the half-eaten baguettes you bought for dinner,
and found impossible to resist as you drove.
Now the weeks come, and they come,
and the years. I let them wash over me —
a river of companionable memories,
an autumn forest of stories, rich and colorful,
fleeting yet unforgettable.
And I carry you with me.
A slight breeze stirs, a curtain gathers
and parts, revealing the shimmering expanse
beyond.
Through the frame, I see you, high on a golden cliff,
chair askew on the uneven ground, your hair
tousled beneath a disreputable straw hat
like some modern-day impressionist,
capturing the California coast
with the perfection you longed for in this life.
You look up from your work. I see you smile,
welcoming, at peace and, finally, dwelling in joy.
The light has transformed, and you
have all the time in the world.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Composed for, and read at, the memorial service
for Walter J Rollin, who died Jan 12, 2020.
He was my dad, my friend, and so much more.
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