I hear my mom howling over Patsy Cline’s croon.
I hear my mom howling over Patsy Cline’s croon.
I am eleven, home alone, and every creak of the floor and tat-tat-tat of the radiator sends a jolt of fear through my body.
One afternoon, I left to fetch water at the stream, my earthenware pot balanced atop my head.
Haylie told me to wait for someone who looks at me the way Flynn Rider looks at Rapunzel, an expression I saw on your face post-show at Buffalo Wild Wings.
Sam needed a ride home after band practice.
I was driving across country with my kids, hoping to see our friend before she went into surgery for cancer.
I stride to class, passing towering lockers.
My finger taps anxiously at the edge of my greasy screen as I anticipate his reply.
“I can’t do this,” I said, plopping down on the closest boulder.
My sister and I sit on the floor, a small wooden table covered with our mom’s and grandmother’s jewelry between us.
On my New Year’s Day walk I noticed an old man looking jaunty in a red tartan scarf.
Midway through my walk, I realize the thing I dread is about to happen.
Some mornings in the hospital they gave us boiled eggs, unpeeled puzzles we had to solve in our blue pyjamas.
Up in Tahoe, Ken had a night.
When the Amtrak train arrived from Chicago, I stood on the platform anxiously watching as passengers began to exit.
When I say "car," it doesn’t sound like a crow crying out. I don’t “warsh up” or “dash off to the loo.”
Probably two or three-hundred pounds of bare naked man is bobbling towards me along the sidewalk outside of the Soldier’s Grove Public Library on Main Street.
My computer is whirring, the screen hot to touch.
My girlfriend’s nephew, barely five, alternated between squeezing my hand and excitedly scooting ahead to the onsen, then skipping back to us.
Dad was dead, but that was beside the point.