Waiting
Location
Lately I’ve been waiting,
waiting for something—for the trees to lose
their leaves, for the clouds to release
their snow, for April showers to summon
the buttercups from the soil.
Autumn builds a cathedral above
my impatient head as light
shimmers through fallow branches
while the sycamores blossom orange.
Till winter’s bustling breeze
pushes up daisies, and summer comes
back to my arms (unnoticed and sudden)
I’ll wait on whoever moves
the universe’s chess pieces to
exile the frost speckling my yard.
Sitting on edge, as spring’s
raspberry sunset grazes the tree line,
and allergies drip from my nose,
I try to spy a lightning bug—
any trace or sign
of summer.
She’ll arrive late May,
with curls toss’d like the sea and
blue eyes two shades lighter
than a cloudless sky.
Treasure her while she lingers,
notice how her bonfires consider
your friends’ faces, with a wild blaze
dim, but bright all the same.
Let the sun brown your shoulders,
moving through each day she tucks away,
with adoration. Forgive her
for fading, for she’s pulled by the wrists on
the galaxy’s time line.
She’ll throw back her head,
laughing a laugh that says
“You don’t know me,
and never will.”
Then she leaves you—
leaves you waiting all year long.