It's getting dark early again. The street lamps are on by dinner. Soon the memory of piles of leaves, the smell of Fall and the call to jump in the whispering
auburn heaps of my youth would jolt me.
I am old now and fat. The ritual of Autumn's call to the dark evenings that were an invitation to the holidays, is a calling cocktail.
The rains drained the ashes into the sidewalk gutters. The hopscotch grid fades as day light melts and I lose the game.
Games are like drifts of scents across the light post's shadow. They are the ephemeral recipes of my New York youth. I walk to the edges of the grass reading the folded paper fortunes that
told me I would marry Jack someday. I didn't. I threw the lined prediction in the leaves, scuffed my brown shoes on the sidewalk
never dreaming that real life would crinkle like the ruled paper forgeries.