I drove dad’s Chevy for the first time one morning In a storm. His old, blue, dented, beat-up, ninety-seven Chevy, Worn tires tractionless on wet asphalt, Raindrops veiling the windshield like the comforter That keeps me warm and safe during the nights I Spend at home, thick and grey with a glint of silver, and Pintucked stitching littering the middle. The lines on the road, like the seams of the comforter, Break evenly and cleanly, stretch on forever. My knuckles, like little snow-capped mountains, Gripped the steering wheel as I did the covers during a nightmare. Dad, on the other hand, Was as calm as the breeze curling around the trees on Any day but today; Relaxed as if the forecast were fine as the Silk of the duvet.
need to hand in for a grade... comment to help me improve!