We’ll be Coming

Mama, us three kids and a suitcase in tow, ran back and forth beside the depot
trying to find where we were supposed to be, panicked, as were we, and the long
whistle blew and she screamed and we cried and a black porter beckoned from an
open door.  We jumped in and Mama, out of breath in her butterfly dress, collapsed
on the scratchy seat as the train started its glide.  She dug around in her big purse
for cans of Mandarin oranges, Vienna sausages, hardboiled eggs.  I stuffed my yolk
between the seat cushions when she wasn’t looking, drank paper cones of cold
water from the fountain down the aisle until I peed on the humming floor and Mama
had to find me some dry clothes.  It was hot and she told us open the slider but don’t
stick out our heads or they’ll get knocked off.  We saw telephone poles roll past,
smelled  stockyard stink, drove our six white horses past barns, spinning windmills,
drylands, open skies, all round the mountains.

 

Karen Jones is a retired high school teacher from Corvallis, Oregon.  She finds she is able to observe and experience the world in greater depth through reading and writing poetry, and she hopes readers will enjoy her poems’ pictures, rhythms, and sounds.

Willawaw Journal

Share
Published by
Willawaw Journal

Recent Posts

Notes from the Editor

Hello Readers, You know how it is when you focus on something like maybe your…

2 months ago

Terry Adams

Lost (2) I like to spend just a few hours once in awhile not knowing…

2 months ago

Frank Babcock

Portrait of Emily She sits in the bedroom window like curtains, whitely gazing down at…

2 months ago

Stephen Barile

Underground Gardens Legend was, After a quarrel with his father, He left Sicily behind And…

2 months ago

Llewynn Brown

Their fair share We turn at the band stand because you say it’s getting dark.…

2 months ago