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Labyrinthine Nocturne

I have grown used to

or at least numb to this way of living.

The rain drips through the ivy above,

hitting against the grey planks.

No water lands on my skin;

I am sprawled across the parallel lines of planks in the wooden floor.

 

I call this the ‘sun grotto’

because of the sundial,

now dark with rainwater,

standing in the circular clearing in the hedges

in front of the entrance to my gazebo.

 

Today might be a day in October.  And,

since the first drop fell,

I’ve been waiting under the grotto

for what feels like hours—

I haven’t been into the maze at all today;

the darkness on the hedges mirrors

the shadows that line the clouds.

 

I see no point in moving

from the grotto today, and while I wait for the rain

to pass, I remember

my first day here, a few summers ago—

 

The humidity at noon under

a liquid sun,

a girl in a rose-colored dress,

our August trip to the hedge maze in the neighboring county,

the laugh she gave as she trotted away:

“let’s get lost in the maze—

come and get me!”

the last I heard of her,

and a glimpse of red cloth rounding the edge

of a wall in the maze,

the last I saw.

 

We had felt so much excitement

and fear

pressing further through the winding paths

decorated here and there with

fountains, gardens,

idyllic cherub statues,

and the grottoes

which I now use as sleeping places

and—like today—

as cover from the rain

which pours here so often.

 

The downpour recedes

allowing me at least the chance to walk

through the maze to one of

the tulip gardens.

 

Not today of course,

but there are days when I hear

the soft laughter of children, friends, and lovers

echo somewhere in the maze—only

a few lanes of manicured green separating me

from them.  Days like those

are difficult to bear.

 

One day, not too many weeks ago,

I heard those sounds and I smiled;

but it came as a shock to hear

the patter of a pair of running feet, so clearly just around

the clean-cut corner of the hedge I was using for shade.

It was the first—the only—time I had heard a sound in the maze

this close, close enough to see and touch—

through the pinhole gaps in the foliage-wall

I saw a burst of color, like clothing.

I shot around the corner, I glimpsed the flicker

of pale red cloth flagging

behind the form that had slid

into another path through the maze.

 

The chase had failed

well before I had taken my first wild steps,

hitting the well-tread path hard

with desperate feet.  I yelled like a drunkard.

Later, I noticed the cuts on my fingers and neck,

sliced into the skin as I flung myself through

one wall of green and skid against the next.

 

Today’s shower is completely over.

I walk myself through the maze, and

avoid the shallow lakes that have formed

in the dips

in the paths, beaten firm by thousands of trampling feet.

Under the sparse autumn light

I collect flowers from one of the many small squares of garden

which I have come to know so well.

With a clump of black

and white tulips in my hands,

I look for a place to ****

Life here is difficult in the winters.

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Written by
zach-gomes
American
Published
Feb 8, 2010
Lines·Words
87·567
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