Something you can hold Touch to make it feel real Like it actually had been there At least somewhere in time
A wedding band slipped on my mother's finger After he proposed with a bread tie
More than two decades ago That's how long I've planted myself here And I wasn't always around in their short story
Happy-sad-sided short story it was, But when holding the circle up to the sunlight A bright fable Beams through An old story A fantasy I call childhood
In the middle of that ring
The strands of light stretch around one bend in its dampened golden body and across to another Like a spider web tangled in between the sheen of once forever It's a little big on my finger
It's my mothers, just a little bigger than me, but it holds a different story to her One she doesn't seem to think about Not like the way I think about mine
I remember my father's gold Roped into his dark hands Stained by sun His working hands Hardened by oil fields and car engines The giant callous he called a palm
The roughest surface spread love into my skin Rubbing it into my back, or gently accross my small sticky hands, like butter Like I was his southern sweat bread They were so different There castle would have fallen anyway My mothers kitchen reads "Yankee"