August Fox
The casket in its grave. Dad forever at rest. People disperse. I remain always a daughter. Whiskey poured from his flask, a glass raised as late afternoon tilts its sun from the sky. Cemetery nestled in a city's noise, I hear absence of sound as the fox trots before me from nowhere. He pauses head turns, our eyes meet, silence grows. We remember winter nights frozen when stillness speaks of who we are. Brother, protector, talisman of travelers we become the wind, unseen, weaving oneness through the art of camouflage. Fox exhales, inhales, grins, scurries across the wasteland. Sweet bell-tones chant through treetops, silhouettes dance dapples upon snowed-earth. The grave is closed. Whiskey warmth within, a reflection of fire; without, the snow, the ice - a path is ablaze through the hearts of shadows and the fox in August the same above as below. © Crane 2005 |