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The Book of Hours
I remember that hour—nearly half my lifespan
ago. Toasted sesame and rice balls caught
onto charcoal cobblestone as flocks
of uniformed students, businessmen, and
grannies after their morning tai chi
briskly walked past each other.
And then, flash forward a few years to another city
in another hour. It was a stark midday when I ducked down
a dingy staircase. Above, fluorescent lights burned in a fizz—
the edge between shadow and light a clear mark.
Metal clanged, and air rushed.
An automated voice announced arrivals on the overhead, and
cramped compartments filled with the nameless
smeared past, plexiglass windows adding
an extra layer of gaudy glare.
Or, how could I forget that hour last winter,
when the air frosted our breaths and the sky
pooled a clear deep indigo speckled with glitter?
All the world a delicate blue robin’s egg,
hanging somewhere in the precipice.
Metallic shopping carts gleaned in the dark, and an
11 pm sprint to kitschy aisles stocked with ramen had
disgruntled employees brusquely kicking us out.
Then, there are the hours drowning in viscous syrup—
golden ambrosia sticking to a conglomeration of
hazy memories linked only through nostalgia.
Swarms of gnats buzzing in the air, creaky swing sets bending
more with each passing year, and
the onset of the setting sun heralding
a call home.
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