Last year’s leaves still gather in the corners
of our yard, and I never closed the chink
around the fireplace that lets in the night.
Another windowpane in the garage
stays cracked another year. October is coming.
The bulb above the sink quivers its light
into the soapy basin water I
trouble into a brew. While I wait for you
I sweep the linoleum, kill flies, unseam
envelopes, roast chickens whole, twist ice trays,
read in the corner chair under the gold
floor lamp. I boil water for tea. Come home.
We’ll keep the windows open late, shiver
under the covers, dreaming of frost.
©
Aaron Brame is the former senior poetry editor of The Pinch. His work appears in or is forthcoming from Indianapolis Review, Heron Tree, Lumina, and Tupelo Quarterly. He lives and works in Memphis, Tennessee.
Wonderful work, Aaron; My Beloved Sandra is far more a world-traveler than I, and I have often lived your poem awaiting her return.
When she travels, she now expects to come home & find such a poem taped to the fridge.
I’m honored to be sharing these pages with this awesome poem. Salute!