Amber drips from the 60’s-style lamps on two end tables. Brassy-orange and bulbous, they illuminate the tangled tracks.
The light spills onto the floor like heavy freight abandoning its car. It spawns the locomotive shadow cast by my grandmother’s sunken-in couch.
I nestle myself snug between the pillows, dense and flattened by years of Sundays. Sundays that bring my father close to his brother, not a brother at all.
I peer over the edge and heave a hushed “all aboard.” Grandma sleeps to unwind the day’s knot of exhaustion.
Each bone-bleach white fiber frays from the chemotherapy that robs her gnarled hands of their strength. This one-way ticket marks the end of a journey of a once well-oiled machine.
The exhales of a CSX spout its peppery breath out in opaque puffs. I am a conductor, tearing the ticket of tonight’s traveler.
Rising to my bare feet now, I sink into the cushion like wet sand. The train thrusts and in a single bound, I leap from the ledge and leave my lone passenger.
The cars whir and hum alongside me. Deafening metallic wind rusts the edge of the rug. I’m still waiting for her return, and in denial that it was her last train.