I recall you turning, from a few feet ahead, that ******* smile under your button nose and knowing brown eyes but you were spinning and laughing, squealing, really, great peels of girlish delight before setting your eyes on distant climes and racing away toward where the sun seemed to meet the pavement and the entire ******* world ended. White sundresses and static in the air around you. Hair tied on either side of your head, in thick braids with those ties that have big colorful plastic *****. Sometimes you'd have beads in your hair, flowers now and then, too. And your eyes the color of earth after a hard rain, I thought you were a fairy, back then. Mythical, you seemed to me. Magical in a way I now only pretend to understand but recognized with awe in those ancient days. I've been a lifetime looking for moody British countryside in American urban squalor. I've seen fairy-circles drawn in chalk on black ashpault, trickling heat waves rising like a ******* spell from them on hot days and I used to feel the voltage of lightening running in my veins when I still believed in that sort of magic. I saw you on a rooftop once, the one with the valley of bare roof like the chamber at the heart of a temple. You stood against the moon and though shadow obscured your knowing beautiful eyes and that ******* smile I know you smiled at me. I know it. I danced with you in dreams for the last years of my too short youth. I still see white sundresses in echoes in my dreams but I no longer believe in magic things. I no longer dance, not even in my dreams.