summer’s end
They toy beneath the peach trees, without meaning a word in this language of sweet nothings. The scent of promise hangs like mist. Cheek to cheek, arm in arm, their half-a-brain-cell forming one. They toy so long, the silly fools, that summer comes and goes. And now they stop to look around and find the peaches are spoilt, the grass needs cutting and life has begun again, this time a golden, honest hue.
One of them sets sail upon the world, in a bid to find the moon. The other goes home, and from the heights of a bedroom window, builds up a life worth living. They bear, onwards and forever, the fruits of that thoughtless, endless summer.
SUMMER INTENTIONS
Comes bright and faint
Never does it not burn the fresh
Summer browns the green
pales the skin
It's thirstier than any other season
Hot through out but loved.
Makes seas safer
land drier but dustier
Summer is harvest-able but not fertile
Enjoys love at first sight
Makes waters busier
Summer sights.
It lights.
Goes heights.
Sudden and blinds.
Hotter like coffee
Never coincidental
Forever impactful
Always memorable
Already proportional
summers intent to mix your emotions.
Varies your intentions
#summer #fruit #intentions #writer #writing #author #poetry #thoughts #creations #imaginations
‘The Fruits of Summer’ Book (Fiction!)
The attic door creaked. I walked in to see lots of boxes. One that stood out to me was a bright green box with AMAZING THINGS marked with sharpie on it. I opened it half expecting to see old trinkets. There was only one thing in there. It was a dusty and old book that had words buried underneath the dust. I wiped it off and it said The Fruits of Summer. It looked interesting so I opened it. I smiled when I saw these fruit fairies on the first page. All of a sudden I heard a pop and I got sucked in the book! When I was there wings emerged from my back and I had a dragon fruit inspired dress. The sun blasted heat and light everywhere. I got sucked right back and I saw my mom in the dirty attic with me.
She beamed at me and said, "You have learned our family secret!" then winked.
Fake Fruit
Fake fruit. There’s so much of it here. Why did she have so much?
I never noticed it while she was alive. It just kinda... fit. A house full of natural light and tapestries bought from local artists and wax fruit filling decorative bowls on every available flat surface. They’re not even all in bowls. I found a pear in the drawer next to her bed, a couple loose grapes on a windowsill. There was an apple in the fridge. I wonder if she put it there on purpose, to be funny, or if it was an accident.
Was it like this when I was growing up? If it was, I don’t remember it. I don’t remember any stories about me trying to eat the decorations as a kid, or inside jokes about how many she owned. But maybe I’ve just forgotten.
That’s the thing about all of this, really. That’s what gets me. It’s not the sorting through a dead woman’s things, packing my mother’s life away into neatly labeled cardboard boxes. It’s not the feeling that I’m invading her privacy.
It’s the remembering. And the forgetting.
I grew up in this house. It was my house when I was a kid, then as I grew up it became my parents’ house. Since my dad died, it’s been my mother’s house. I don’t know whose it is now. I guess it’s my house again.
I pick up a colorful mug out of the cabinet, stuff some paper inside of it, set it in a cardboard box. Repeat the process. This one I painted for her when I was 9. It’s weird that it’s mine again.
There are so many things here with stories behind them. The ones that hurt the worst are the ones I don’t know. I take a painting down from the wall, and on the back of it is a note:
To: Annie
Thought you might like this.
-Charles
The painting is a landscape of a barn with a couple horses grazing in the foreground. I don’t know who Charles is or why he thought my mother would like this painting in particular. For a moment, I panic. There’s a whole facet of my mother’s life that I won’t be able to preserve. I consider searching the funeral registry book for a Charles, tracking him down, making him tell me the story behind this painting.
But I can’t. Because there are so many other unanswered questions here.
Letters from people whose names I don’t recognize. I don’t have the heart to read them. Tacky mugs that weren’t to her taste at all. Why did she keep them?
I focus on the stories that I do know, for a while. The pillowcase that I dyed with my grandma as a Mother’s Day present. The dark purple grape juice stain, a result of my childhood clumsiness just two days later. I was devastated, ashamed that I’d ruined the gift I worked so hard on.
She told me she loved it even more, that she loved the splash of color it added.
The centerpiece on the table is ceramic, made to look like cherry blossoms. I went to college near DC, and I sent it home as a gift my first semester. She always said she felt closer to me whenever she looked at it.
God, I miss her.
I wish I could reminisce with her one more time. I wish I could make her tell me all the stories again, even though I knew most of them by heart. I wish I could ask her about the ones I don’t know.
I wish I knew why she had so much fake fruit. It always comes back to that. Most of the other things I at least noticed while she was alive. I’d looked at that painting thousands of times, never thought to ask where she got it. But the fruit. It had to be intentional, right? There’s too much of it here to be a coincidence.
I don’t think I’ll ever know the answer.