Maybe it ruins the story to say at the start that no one was hurt
the day Scotty Forester swung open the door of the family car,
climbed up, put one hand on the wheel and, then, while pushing
and pulling on buttons and knobs, he found and released
the brake, and it started, the silver-blue Mercury, to roll
down Robin Street, best street in the neighborhood for sledding,
for coasting on a bike with arms waving above your head,
Scotty gaining speed on the long sweep of that block, heading
toward the intersection, then into it, then speeding
through, the car beginning to slow as the street leveled out,
although, toward the end, Scotty going fast enough
to jump the curb before stopping, three feet from a gas pump.
Maybe knowing the ending ruins this story, but sometimes
we need a break from dread. We need to know that the car
did not crash, the child did not die. We need to briefly forget
that we live in a world where a car is gaining speed, and
no one seems to be at the wheel. We need to be more
like the dog Scotty drives past, who barks, and runs in circles
as he barks some more, driven by some circuitry we have lost
for loving this dangerous life, living it.
Copyright © 2026 by Suzanne Cleary. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 10, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.
with the shock of hospice behind her
and her ashes scattered on her cherished Pacific.
She’s flipped the hourglass and stopped it at 29,
when her hair was still chestnut and waving
to her waist. And because it’s November and nighttime
she’s wearing one of those vintage wool coats,
wide lapels, no buttons or belt, a blue nearly gray
in the foggy noir light of the streetlamps.
It’s cold enough she has to hold it tight
against her body. Too cold for the emerald
silk teddy, or her long tanned legs in b-ball shorts,
ready for some serious one-on-one. I’m dying
to stop my steep climb home, turn around and ask her
if she’s really here, but Orpheus is in my ear,
warning me not to make that old mistake.
It’s about trust, I think. Keep moving
through the gloom of a spinned myth:
let those you’ve loved come back
when they’re ready, when you’re ready,
as if no one were lost to begin with.
Copyright © 2026 by Thomas Centolella. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 21, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.