the heat crept up
with the rain and
when the storms
left us
it left us
with broken trees
mostly cracked down
the middle
or the sides
shaved away by
lightning
showing the splintered
insides of the sweetgums
and the silver maples
a dogwood tree
in full bloom
stared silently at its
pale children
that lay just above
its roots like
stray feathers from
a cast out angel
after the fall
it was a little
over a hundred degrees
and when I walked
up the ramp into the house
I untied the long strings
from behind my
railroad boots and peeled
the socks out from
my heels and then my
from pruned toes
I should have knocked
my jeans clear of its
hanger-ons but
I always forgot
and they fell off
in my wake
I grabbed two short glasses
from the red cabinets
one square edged
one round
and I sat them
where I leaned
in front of the empty
sink
I poured Greenhook
in mine warm as it was
and filled the other
with water from the faucet
which I poured into
the drouthy dirt of a
potted plant
that was the first in
a row of five
then I watered myself
I didn’t know a
damn thing about
plants and it was
obvious I didn’t know
how to take care of
them or
anything else
but she loved plants
from the moment
I met her ten years ago
and she loved plants
to this day
and she could grow
them as if they had
been her own hair
or nails
she used to point out
flowers in ditches
and name them
and she would see plants
on my land I never noticed
and she would name them
she is as far gone
as she is
regardless of these plants
that sit in my kitchen
that I went out and bought
and felt ridiculous trying
to choose which ones
I make no falsities there
but drinking them
one by one
reminds me of her
and it doesn’t make sense
but nothing ever has
and sometimes all you got
is the things you do
and sometimes
all you got is the things
that you don’t
and what I got is these
plants
and what he’s got is you
that’s that, in green.