Still Dreaming
by Michelle Askin
Now it’s all sorrowful and pleading litanies from my useless ghost-like heart and body. I know. But I remember what it was to move to a city for the first time and to be handed fresh towels from my landlady along with stories of forbidden love overshadowing war from her youth in Guatemala even if it was just for a brief while. And then more beauty, her saying to pull open the white curtain by AM’s 6:30 for the orange bulb sunrise— like a soft balloon floating among polluted traffic and towers. And I remember my first shower in the rusted tub, how I imagined the water was the night’s warm rain falling over the high-rise hotels and tent markets, where I could hear greetings and fish sales in Arabic. Whatever was said, it sounded so inviting, like the swaying of those lilac bushes, the shifting of dogwood branches in the damp wind surrounding the red rowhomes of my boarding room. I love the memory of you putting the address and number in your yellow felt coat. By then it was February, and snow and bell serenades from the Japanese embassy drifted through the streets. One day we will meet again. Maybe on a metro rail, circling above sycamores and highway bridges, the one I take nightly just to remember what it was to be part of the living. And you will sit by me in an orange seat. When we go through the tunnels to liquid-like trance served by the lonely and sincerely sad young DJs, inside, it will feel like stars lighting some new silver water-soaked galaxy.
Michelle Askin’s poetry and short fiction have appeared in 34th Parallel Magazine, The Tiny Journal, Pleiades, MayDay Magazine, Santa Clara Review, and elsewhere. She lives in Reston, Virginia.