On her last ride on the Arkansas river, she watched the world turn crooked, all the hickory shading yellow, their leaf tears forming sunny arrows in the flow, nuts falling in the glide, bringing smoker memories of hams cooked under their roast, red maples tapped for their syrup, the unharvested loblolly pines dropping their branches almost in caress, one last kiss.
Inside she could feel the cross go slanted in her golden bedroom, envision her daughter taping together the amber pages of their Bible turned to Luke 8:24, felt the Arkansas’ lull, her in breath becalming the storm inside, while shedding a tear for her gray mutt with a rill of white running up his snout and down his belly, staring at the spot where the burned ashes of her bedding would be buried.