I woke one night and you were gone.
Sitting upright, covers heavy over
my drawn-up knees—you were gone.
The darkness was a comfort, and I knew
you were in it, lingering nearby in case
I reached for you. But you were gone.
And, as blue faded to gray, a new day
rising like mist from the grass, I breathe in,
breathe out, and you were gone. Sunlight
crept into the garden, gilding the trees
from the tips of the highest branches,
sliding down the papery bark.
It glistened, and you were gone.
A hummingbird visited the feeder outside
your window, wings a blur, tiny beak piercing
red plastic flowers—he knew no better—
and you were gone.
Gone were your African hills, glazed with green
and veiled in a violet haze. Gone the beasts,
large and small, like your laughter, lurking
in shaded corners for so long.
Gone were the blues of Biscayne, and the dreams
of driving north, and north where you will be
remembered long after you are gone.
Those you adored, the luckiest among us,
shoulder the burden of your blessings, compelled
to carry on, to love as you loved, to protect
what you cherished, because you are gone.
Last night, I dreamt I woke, and you were here
again, voice a warm ribbon of light, making little
of the distance between us. And warmed by
a blazing sun, I asked for wisdom (never in short
supply where you dwelled) and you said:
I am gone, and I can hear you.
I am gone, and I can see.
The shadows and the lights
are one. In the depths, where
warm water grows cold,
I am the shaft of daylight
that guides you to the surface.
And awake, knees drawn up beneath my blanket’s
weight, I felt the fluttering loss behind my eyes.
This is a spring you will not see—this tree, this bird,
this flower. The golden light drenching the leaves
belongs to a word world where you no longer are.
Grief is a thing that swims, and surfaces from time
to time, to breathe a cloud, inhale love, submerge again,
and all this is well, and all is well. And still, when I woke,
you were gone.
(c) 2020, by Hannah Six
On Sunday, March 1, 2020, I learned my beautiful friend, Marta Reilly,
had died suddenly at her home in Florida. I will treasure her memory
and wisdom forever, and will love and miss her always.
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