Out by the bay Sonja sleeps She opens her eyes Only to peek At the passing cars Or at the loud noise Maybe it's her name Maybe it's his voice Then out of the blue A man passes by And then she pretends To keep shut her eyes But here I am By the nearby palm tree, spying I notice that Sonja is not sleeping She's crying Tears are of no notice to others but me Poor sleeping Sonja Under the tree I can make up all sorts of stories But I never will know From where these tears came To where will it go So I sat beside Sonja A drink in my hand I said "Sonja, my dear Do not cry. I know you are weary That's why you sleep. But know dearest that I have been watching you weep." Sonja opened her eyes, all in a glaze Then asked me a question Looking away from my face She spoke in the faintest of voices, she said, "Hal do you know who that man was, the man in the hat? If you do not know, then why do you care? You do not know me enough to despair." "Sonja, how do I know that your name is yours? There is a meaning to actions however you don't see. Now tell me your story." Then the man went and stood from the stool he had sat And left with his panama hat He did not even look our way He said not a word, from the very start to the very end It seemed he had made his way there To see sleeping Sonja, that was all. She told me of lost love Of not wishing to sin She told me he married A woman he did love But their love was new His and Sonja's was old Sonja had been sent to a convent When they were in love When she broke her vow She thought so could he Now he merely passes the bay And Sonja waits patiently I felt for her story When would she end her waiting? When she gets old and the sun wrinkles her skin? Why does he keep her hoping? Pain is a memory that we insist on remembering Forgetting is a choice, not a flaw How can we forgive When we return to the past? He must be returning the favor he thinks And Sonja sleeps in atonement.