The Moment
"How have you been?” the stranger asks,
A sudden feeling, as if I’m being attacked.
It’s hard to move, I’m not sure where I am,
I need to get home, but I don’t know if I can.
I have to calm down, I can’t let her know,
I must relax, I’ve got to take control.
“I’m just fine,” I say, as I look around the room,
I don’t recognize a thing, an impending doom.
Her eyes are kind, concern across her face,
There’s something about her, I just cannot place.
“That’s so good to hear, I’ve missed you so much,”
For some odd reason, her face, I need to touch.
“I’ve missed you too,” I easily lie,
I think she knows, I can see it in her eyes.
“It’s ok,” she says, “I understand,”
She leans in softly and caresses my hand.
I gaze at her beauty, her petal soft skin,
There is a sense of comfort, sparked from within.
She reminds me of Stella, my long-passed cousin,
But so many years have gone by, at least a dozen.
I think of her funeral, the day was somber,
The trouble with time is, for me, it seems to wander.
I remember that day, but yesterday is a blur,
I am grateful for the moment with this sweet-faced girl.
And suddenly the look in her eyes turns grim,
And when I look down, I don’t recognize my own skin.
I turn my hands over, and tremble with fear,
They have aged, at least, over forty years.
I look back up at the girl just once more,
The tears in her eyes begin falling to the floor.
And for one glorious instant, it all becomes clear,
I lean in and whisper, “ I love you, dear.”
She beams with a smile, her eyes are calm,
She looks at me and says, “I love you, Mom.”