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Paper Fortunes

Late afternoon, haze hung low, heat and sky

holding breath. You’re it. No tag-backs. Asphalt

 

freckles our knees. Dinner is anytime: bologna

on white; Kool-Aid cut thin with tap. No hurry home

 

unless for the news. We don’t.

We want what’s coming, not what’s been.

 

Paper fortune tellers flutter open, close.

She writes the answers first, back turned.

 

Lift one flap: your dog dies. Another: a prince

charming. Another: best party in town,

 

limousine awaits. He lifts a flap: her name.

actually meant for you, her sister whispers.

 

Then rain, the blue-lined paper sags, ink settles

in cracks, bare feet scatter, futures wash

 

mid-fold into a storm drain. At Cheshire and

Green Meadows, a drunk witch swears Venus and Jupiter

 

will make us all rich. She leaves out how long

the sky makes you wait. Lunch money turns

 

to lottery slips. Rounding the corner, moving vans

idle over chalked hopscotch, our names folded under.

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Written by
William-A-Gibson
M / Cambria CA
Published
Aug 17, 2025
Lines·Words
20·154
Tags
#childhood#belief#luck#paper#summer#omens#poverty#crush#1978
Permission

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