Angel
By Tiare Devenot
I push my child’s carriage through
fall confetti—pumpkin and gold,
maple and birch, that play about
licorice pavement.
We stroll past your forgotten walls—
once white, grey in time.
Vintage glass ripples over decades,
blurred and burdened. Heavy silk,
a deeper shade a of plum, droops
behind eyes of two large windows.
Ruddy metal of a Christmas star
stabs in September. Spines of frames
display, I imagine,
photos of strangers,
printed on cheap paper.
I smell the moth kissed dust
of deeper-than-plum silk, and
hear vibrant laughter of a blonde family
behind the calloused frames.
I feel the prick of a
red Christmas star
in September.
I fall on four, and scrub
black floors with green soap
until oak again. I float through
a labyrinth of halls with sage.
Smoke greys corners
with second chance,
past dull brass knobs
that open rooms
of forgotten beds, stale sheets,
and peeling wallpaper.
The sub song of a crow
brings me back
to licorice payment.
Behind iron gates,
the black bird waits
at your step.
Pebble eyes follow, you,
hunched over steel arms,
that gleam painfully in the sun.
You drag them through
clover and hay, like heavy wings,
forgotten to fly.
They say
your husband is dead.
Your daughter
angry.
You live with crows and
two black horses
behind in pastures.
Times I try to say hello,
your neck strains down—
wings pull through
a new sky of clover and hay.
I crane,
past my angel, who
tells me to look up.
Beyond the falling
maple and birch—
pumpkin
and gold.