Along the Shore
by Holly Day
We walk hand in
hand between the concrete pilings, mindful
Of broken beer
bottles and the occasional raccoon-gnawed dead fish.
She squeals as
we step into the water, lets go of my hand
To chase after
the tiny silver fry darting away from her shadow.
Just a few feet
away from us, the sand slopes sharply
Into a pocket
of darkness. I point out the deep blue shadows
Of danger just
ahead of us, warn her to stay close, stay right by me.
She asks me if
there are monsters in those depths
Some great
river snake coiled at the bottom of the murky sinkhole
Giant sturgeons
slumbering beyond the fishermen’s reach.
She asks about
these things in such hushed, reverent tones,
That I am aglow
with delight at this tiny glimpse
Of the world
inside my daughter’s head.
* * * * *
Holly Day has
taught writing classes at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
since 2000. Her poetry has recently appeared in Big Muddy, The
Cape Rock, New Ohio Review, and Gargoyle, and
her published books include Walking Twin Cities, Music Theory for
Dummies, Ugly Girl, and The Yellow Dot of a Daisy. She has
been a featured presenter at Write On, Door County (WI), North Coast Redwoods
Writers' Conference (CA), and the Spirit Lake Poetry Series (MN). Her newest
poetry collections, A Perfect Day for Semaphore (Finishing
Line Press) and I'm in a Place Where Reason Went Missing (Main
Street Rag Publishing Co.) will be out late 2018.
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