The Willow’s River
On a blistery morning, the graceful willow waves,
unnoticed
by the pontoon boats that skim the river’s surface,
dodging limbs.
A sound of laughter carries on the breeze.
An old fisherman
staggers as he clutches a taut line,
ready for his bragging rights to a tall tale about
the “Big One.”
On a blustery afternoon, the cold willow shivers,
unnoticed
by a speed boat fast approaching,
creating giant waves, its bikini clad passenger,
dances, her long hair whipping, as rock music blares.
On a balmy moonless night, the helpless willow weeps,
unnoticed
while an unfathomable murderous secret
is tossed beneath the darkest fathoms,
with an anchor attached to roped flesh and sinew,
crashing like unwanted trash to line the stone river
bed.
.
On the river, the seasons seem amplified.
Troubles end or begin
with adventures, renewals, mysteries, tragedies,
an enchanted bloom of love or a thorn of hate,
a sacred space conjoined of man, river and aquatics,
all watched by an unnoticed ancient willow.
It’s 2 am and as
usual, my circadian rhythm has disrupted.
I am awake with
achy joints, resembling an elderly Goldilocks,
stumbling through
each room of my house, trying to get comfortable,
processing Math
manipulations in my overactive hypothalamus
of lambs wearing
dresses, who usually wind up getting devoured by an absurdly big bad wolf,
which messes up my
count,
in my early
morning fog.
I guess I am at
such an age.
Outside, a car
slowly glides by, lights on dim,
its driver rolls
down the window, and flicks out a cigarette butt onto the pavement,
sees me staring
through the blinds, and gives a two fingered wave.
I quickly lower
the blinds, plop in the recliner, and turn on the TV.
In the distance, a
siren sounds.
With the relief
that I’m not the only one awake,
I close my eyes
and sleep.
Misery loves
company, after all.
It’s cold here
In the mountains,
a thousand miles
from the sea.
I miss the fire
that burned in
your
words, so
combustible
their embers
scorched
my very essence;
forged from the
ancient wisdom
of the Holy
Text;
the drumming of
your heart
beat against my
chest.
Oh, to have but
an inch of your FREEDOM,
flowing through
my veins.
I’d play in the
surge of the ocean’s swells,
dance upon
Jupiter’s moons,
and etch my name
amongst the stars.
Burn in me Fire,
burn, baby burn.
It’s time to catch the metro
I clear off my desk as fast as I can in my
skyscraper building
wave goodbye to security as I rush out to
trod the rain sodden streets.
Lugging my laptop bag, backpack laden with
Tupperware and my latest umbrella,
hastily found under my desk for
emergencies.
The brisk wind catches my umbrella, turning
it spine side upwards.
Rain pellets my face like tears on a
pillow, as I scramble for my jacket’s hood.
My suede boots snag a puddle on the uneven
pavement, causing me to stumble
and my burdens to shift. I collided with
Superman, in his disguise as Clark Kent as
he was rushing to save the world.
We bump shoulders, mutter polite
apologizes.
He goes east and I go west, him on an
upward flight to a fire on 5th street
and me to sit in a crowded bus for a 45 minute ride to an early night,
drinking Kool-Aid and eating pretzels,
in my little flat, complete with a cat.
Becky Parker is a writer in TN. Her works can be found in Spirit
Fire Review, Agape Review, Appalachia Bare, the Potato Soup Journal, the Rye
Whiskey Review, Yellow Mama and SweetyCat Press, and upcoming in North Dakota
Quarterly and Sequoyah Cherokee River Journal.
Beautiful work, Becky! "The Willow's River" is my favorite of these four gems; simply striking!
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