Not Gray Not Yellow
Elizabeth Kerlikowske
Fall is my grandmother’s cloche hat
pulled down tight of over the barbs of her hair
Leaf smoke rustles the shrubs
Eye-watering season of caramel apples and pie
skitter of maple spinners on pavement
down the yellow line like sixteenth notes
leading the cortege to Pioneer Cemetery
My grandmother’s hat flies from her head
when the north wind grabs a raveling
Mother Nature’s shenanigans
She tricks us into morning,
crackling twigs of tomorrow bent in the finite dawn
My grandmother throws off the grave
Who will clip the hair of the headstones
when the ancestors have gone home
Howling headstones call to the memories of elms
in what passes for Lithuanian
Geese catch the hat on the nibs of their beaks
and glide it down over the state’s mitten
Our fire dances in the thick silence of snow
There is nothing left to want