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This Town

I walk out their back door

and onto F street.

I stand there for a second

halfway up the hill

staring at the deep reds and soft pinks of the fading sunset

and then turn and continue on my way

into the shadows of the multi story brick buildings

that form my high school

my old school.

I walk through the staff parking lot and under the library

where I spent my lunches for three of those four years

alone.

I climb the stairs and walk past the couch,

the giant cement couch that gets re-painted every night

with a message of some sort,

this time it's white with green letters welcoming the 2014 seniors.

the lights are all on and another guy walks past on the other side of the lawn

I stand there for a second and he passes me

I want to stand here forever

staring at all the buildings

staring at my life for four years,

but I continue on

past the annex, the gym, the Stuart

past the Catholic church where I took pictures in the last snowstorm

past the Mar Vista portables and the art portable

and down Blaine street

where we'd run freshman year in PE,

tapping the gate at Chetzemoka and running back.

Sophomore year I'd walk the same route

during photography and video productions, with friends.

Some days I would turn and walk down to Aldriches,

some days I would continue on

some days I would rehearse my own poetry under my breath.

Today I turn a block before Chetz and continue down the hill

past the condos and the turn off for Point Hudson

past the skate park

past Memorial Field (packed with so many memories)

past the park, the old police station,

the ice cream shop dad used to work at,

the tea shop where I've spent so many hours,

the fountain, the stairs, the writers workshop, the old underground coffeeshop,

my therapist's office, the best pizza in town,

the motel where my mom's first roommate now lives (and works),

into the port and past grandma's old workplace,

past the restaurant my grandpa used to spend hours at

and the boat he used to live on

past the port showers they used to use

and onto the trail along the beach I would walk with mom and grandma

when my now 12 year old brother was in a stroller,

past the mill, sitting at the bottom of three long winding hilly roads,

containing memories of that awful polluted stench that clings to the first third of this town

and would cling to my dad when he'd return from work,

and up the road we lived on when we first moved here.

Past the homeless trails I have scavenged for beer cans on for hours for spare change

and the apartments we used to live in,

past the flowershop where I bought the corsage

that the cheerleader I went to prom with kept getting complimented on.

Past my best friends house

and past the flooring place that we mowed the grass for last summer.

Across the roundabout that has grown into the highway

past the crematorium and waste not want not.

Past the apartments that she lives in, my name still somewhere in her heart.

Past my fathers Jeep and under the archway, covered in dead roses.

Across the mossy yard and through my front door.

I'm going to miss this town.

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Written by
brandon-webb
American
Published
Jun 28, 2013
Lines·Words
65·572
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