The purple folding face drips into the cake-colored battlement: night is here again. The sun has kneeled into the treeline, into the gauze-clouds whose humid cobalt heads hang, hang, just hang all angled like hammers in a carpenter's belt.
Everything seems to be ending: cicadas have erupted in tens and sevens with bright scarlet eyes to die on the sidewalks in little hums and hisses, looking at me through whetted blades of lawn.
I'm moving soon, to the point of the old triangle where we haunted the coffee and ice cream store, where she stole a little shining spoon that we used to mix the luminous milk into the coffee pool.
How will it feel, after dark, under unfamiliar high-stippled ceilings? So quiet - she's gone - her vacant clothes no longer flutter in the closet when the breeze slips through.
Will some rain come, blue-brushed brow, & wash this feeling away? I feel the night moving, crawling on insect feet - the air is full of absences, great holes that go unfilled.
The wind is settled in the east, and the clouds are gathering heavy hems. I find a single dark hair of hers on the inside of the pillow case, years later, years later.