on my street. This year, I’ll hang mine
on Juneteenth—an act as hopeful as rising
each morning and walking to work between
the houses and cars, not because my job’s
a drag, but because I can: I can walk down
the street without fear. I’ve been doing it
my whole life without a thought. Today’s
Sunday and this creek bottom hike does
not offer escape because after I can’t breathe,
from what do I so urgently need release?
Overhead, a thin bar of clouds hushes
the warblers in the spruce, though, really,
they have few predators. They turn back on
when sunlight slips beneath the dark band
and flares like a match just above the
ridgeline. It gives one short glimpse of
Paradise, before burning it all down.