Your brown shadow falters in the umber down feathers of summertime.
I catch tremulous thoughts of you for a second; but they slip my grasp - lancing light. The shards of memory suffuse softly and then evaporate.
Once more your sylvan form appears to me, twenty years ago in that green dress - cool cotton kissing honey skin as we make moves in sunshine.
"Father, what is love?" interposes our son, as, holding hands, we walk to meet you.
"She's a cruel mistress," I half joke, furtively glancing at the half spent pavement of my past and present, patting his brown head - a blur of uncombed hair rising from unwashed uniform.
"But my teacher says that God is love!" he exclaims, confused, with bright soft eyes full of earnest enquiry.
"She's not wrong," I whisper, in gentle deference as we turn past the familiar corner of our graveyard.
He catches my doting look as an autumnal breeze washes over the warm cellophane and rustles the blue cornflowers.