On what would turn out to be Katie’s last good day she asked to be wheeled outside & helped into the Lazyboy her brother dragged out back no one even bothering to remove the tag from Costco that flapped, wild as a trapped bird before the wind surrendered to a thin cardigan of mid-December sun as all afternoon we watched her sleeping while the sky hemorrhaged quietly down & the small hills of dogshit arranged along the graying cedar fence did not blaze into anything like golden stones, but her hair had grown back a half inch or so & so glowed in the last of that tinny glare & if I thought briefly then of medieval manuscripts where everyone important grows a halo it wasn't quite like that either although the bones of her face did appear as if at low tide to surface smooth as driftwood where the injured bird might light in the moonlight, holding on for some measures longer than expected. |
No comments:
Post a Comment