old journals
friendly visit
with strangers
prune juice
no cure for brain
constipation
old journals
friendly visit
with strangers
prune juice
no cure for brain
constipation
county fair
scents of cotton candy
and animal barns
faith in humanity
my long list of
passwords
going stag . . .
i follow deer tracks
into the forest
old growth . . .
her mother’s voice
under her own
birthday
reaching twenty-one
at blackjack
The River
The clear stream carried the morning sunlight to the bend where it disappeared. I waded in and cast my line to the shallows of the opposite bank, hoping to hook Walleye or Bass. After an hour of casting and reeling, catching nothing but time, I was ready to close my tackle box and call it a day, when a dragonfly landed on the tip of my rod. Perched in a six-legged grip, it was a blue bloom at the end of a long stem. The wings, glinting in sun, translucent, thin as a whisper, did not move, like a biplane grounded. Its eyes looked like dark observatories. Then, as quick as a blue-tipped match stuck to life, the dragonfly lifted, hovered for a moment, then disappeared into light, leaving me standing there, the first catch of the day, shimmering in water.
fishing lure
the flash of her leg
in fine-mesh net
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