Four to Six Inches, Reading, Massachusetts, by Kasandra Larsen
Posted on October 9, 2019
She wants me to see the snow on the trees,
the branches specifically
before it blows to the ground or melts, leaving
spider arms to wave and dangle
their remaining treasures,
crisped to endless trembles. I’ve seen snow
of course, before. Trees
but not these trees, not adorned
with these satin gloves,
this hint of sparkle, not these limbs
reaching, first toward sun, then stars, next
a night with no moon.
I’ve never seen winter at this age in
this town, until right now
and now, and now
with her still in it, nodding
as I fill in the white space of the
disability questionnaire
with words for fear,
categories of being afraid, lists of activities
her illness/injury/sickness now makes difficult,
her teacup jittering, held by twisted fingers, twigs
that shake in the stillness
of her kitchen as she nods, yes
pain here and here and also here, yes, limited
mobility as a slab of snow slides
from the roof, explodes on the driveway, punctuates
the process of our growing
old, leaving diamonds to crunch
beneath aching feet. We go out to shock our lungs
into breathing, slap
our own cheeks, every day closer to spring
whether or not we’re here
to make a list of what we miss
about it, whether or not
we’re there to see the branch bud
in response to being touched back by the sun, trusting
the wait would pay. Buried
beneath her skin is a girl
with a red coaster sled, unafraid to slide
down the steepest hill
in the cemetery, steer between the headstones.