A wooden fence encloses her
Sacramento yard
and every time she considers it
the vein in her forehead throbs
in thinking of the other side.
The neighbor’s trumpet vines climb the slats
poke through the cracks and cascade over the top,
wild, free, and untended.
His garden was once on a magazine cover,
the cornerstone of neighborhood tours.
A quiet neighbor who kept himself to himself
but passed her tips and cuttings from over the fence.
It was spring when he left the gate unlocked.
Her irises were in bloom, rain in the air,
the day she arrived home to yellow tape
wrapped the length of their adjoining fence.
Policemen with dogs stomped the herbs
and the baby’s breath and traumatized the cat
lying in the sun on their dash across her yard
to follow the killer's path lest the trail
grow cold and dissipate like the promise of rain.
She walks her paths through autumn color,
checks her locks and eyes the roofline.
She tore out the grass in front and converted
it to a rose garden—a white border of shrub roses
and statuesque teas of yellow, carmine, and pink.
Waist high, they point their thrones skyward.
The prompt today from Claudia at the Poet's Pub is to write a poem about gardens and/or gardening. How could one resist? It's summer and it's all I do, even when I'd rather be writing. Thank you for reading about the good neighbor who is a no-more man and the woman who prevails.
12 comments:
Incredible storytelling. I read it three times.
Wonderfully told, and the ending is perfect.
oh wow - what an incredible storytelling here - love how you wove this - and i feel sad for her as well
Enjoyed. Wonderful writing.
Going to be one of my favorites .... rose thorns to keep her safe.
Wow! What a great story woven into a fine poem!
A garden will always change when the gardener is gone... what a story you told.
Engaging, and a fine read Yvonne! 🙂
Beautifully written story. Thank you for sharing!
This is such beautiful storytelling.. I found myself glued to my seat as I read on 💝💝
Thanks everyone so much for reading and commenting. I will visit everyone personally and comment. Thanks!!!
This is an interesting garden tale, Yvonne! Unexpected and gripping. Sad, the yellow tape, the trampled garden. And who will care for the cat?
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