Sam, bless him, has died and left this home, the woodchucks running wild, the
bushes overgrown. Slip unseen into the skein of trees, slide through dusky
grasses and scatter his ashes. It’s all over, he’s never coming
back. There’ll be no more roaming. He was only here for fourteen years,
and now the branches scratch my face and I can’t hold back my tears.
Long ago I’d see him running in the snow, he’d come in from the
cold and he’d lie down by the stove. Pass along this loping road, the
needley grasp of briars on the slope. He’d never been to church, so he
doesn’t have a soul. He isn’t waiting at the place where all of
us will go. But the woodchucks wouldn’t run so wild, the bushes
wouldn’t be so overgrown if we were not alone. Bound unbound through the
boundless air, remaining wisps of hair. Barking out through everywhere, the
trees, the grass, the rain, and Sam in the air. He was in this world, by my
side he was curled, but he came uncurled and this world holds him that much
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