I. Box fans and mowers drone below, distant traffic murmurs through summer’s heat. Memory presses: teeth and old thunder. Regret. Punishment. Hope. Repeat.
My ears ring with histories, sometimes cicadas, sometimes sermons, sometimes her humming, barefoot by the creek, sometimes the sting of my father’s belt.
Sunlight slants through bloated magnolia leaves, thick as tongues, slick with old rain. It stains the walls with a color like yolk, like aging joy.
II. I wake in moonlight, before the rumble. Step barefoot onto concrete still warm from the last sun.
The sky is full of stubborn stars, hung from the last funeral. I watch. I wait. No birds yet. No breeze. I stay.
I tell myself this is peace. But the silence knows better.