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FEBRUARY
Driving on the back roads, snow-covered fields rolling out on either side, like the gauze that covers my foot and ankle, the wound that just won’t heal. An abscess like an absence, this blank landscape, the black alphabet of trees. It’s too cold to be out; small animals huddle in burrows or shelter in hedgerows. Too cold for most birds to be flying. Already, the losses adding up: my cousin’s husband who didn’t wake up; high school friends, two of them, who’ve walked down that long corridor; the friend I talked to every week who suddenly couldn’t breathe in the middle of the night. It’s the season of no return, no coming back with the green grass and crocuses doing their hocus-pocus with purple and gold scarves. No, this is what isn’t: the unreturned phone call, the unanswered text, the unwritten email, the empty chair. This is it, the last inning, the final quarter, the must-be-met deadline for my age group, the actuarial clock ticking. Every field, every hollow, fills up with snow. ~Barbara Crooker |
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