A weathered door of a face. Her house, captured in a bubble, on Anterograde Lane. In the dark; in the corner, her leg, scarred in cursive, propped, like the whole of her frailty; on a budget wheelchair, second hand.
A boy, brand new, who will soon be old enough to forget what happened. What mother? On the road, smeared with hot, gushing jet-black highway blood; encompassing the coagulated being of what was, and, only in hushed talks, a mother. What daughter?
How old are you, this time? These words slip out of a smile. And she wishes she could hold him -- but her frayed fingers fight back, with every twitch trying to touch. Delayed comfort becoming devastation -- 4 years-old. She can hardly believe it.
Pain eats her grocery bag arms, bulbous in her bones like confused locusts, frenzied. The boy's eyes are a deep brown nutrient-rich soil, perfectly fertile; needing to be cared for and grown.
Forever, she could, protect him from The Lurking that killed his mother. At the very least, for however many remaining years. Three. Five. Eight. Becoming a lantern before his sight; guiding him from dangerous design drifting between trees, in the dark.