In dull half-dawn I hear mice scamper. My tabby, Paramedic, stirs like wind around my feet. Recovering from disquieting dream, I rise to dress, yet do not find my shoes. I move closet clutter to uncover dust-covered Reeboks, white comfort lost to heaps of scrapbook and nylon carry bag. Then, reaching for Reebok, I am shocked by languid glint emanating from shoe hollow. I find a mirror on ragged Scholl-- on a pad inserted long ago. Paramedic softly purrs while rubbing up against me. I seize one oval oddity (this mirror out of nowhere) with mild trepidation, hold it in my palm, weigh anxious possibilities. As dawn disposes tired night, I struggled with my wits, feel smooth of silver on my skin (for it is framed, albeit thin), and look to notice, only briefly, a refection I can recognize, an image that is me. Yet just as fast I fade like steam; new faces then appear. Reluctantly as first, as if a power drain or if restraint was part of code extant. They relate with confidence, an aunt I knew, an uncle on a farm, a great grandfather wearing black, seated in a Model-T. I feel the rush of space. 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp 9-8-14 |