
It was the last gift you gave me.
A bag of seeds. We spent
days tending that barren patch of clay– barricading it,
watering it,
tiling it again and again. Then we started feeding it all those fancy mineral mixes
advertised on TV, and spreading cow poop because
you said your momma said “baby, growing up through
shit makes a person stronger.”
So, I guess flowers could be like people too.
If only we weren’t so fragile.
We held hands, as I poured the tiny little dandelion
rocks into those dark holes, and then we cover them the rich dirt we found in the woods by your house the
night we tried to find that falling star. Then we let go.
We always knew they would grow, but I guess
we shouldn’t have planted seeds that can survive anywhere.
The day the moving truck came for your things I tilled that nostalgic patch of ground. And now
when I look out window and I see us
pouring ourselves into black, I want to
burst through the glass, sprint across the damp brown grass and stop me from falling.
But I don’t, because I’d prove to myself that I’m going crazy
without you. I hate living
with knowing every year those damn dandelions are coming back. And every year
the wind will blow more pieces of us away. And every year
more dandelions will grow, until the whole yard looks like our garden.
I want those flowers to die.

Egypt English2013 © E. English Publishing