Late September
across the street
the first few spots
of yellow dot the lush green
abundance of trees
despite the searing blueness of sky
and bathwater-saturated
Carolina air
lingering summer
yet in it I feel a tinge
the tiniest tinge
an almost imperceptible
coolness
deep in the wooded shadows
from a sun-patched limb, no doubt,
a lone cicada takes up his rattle
crescendo, decrescendo
they were late arriving this year
but still here
driving to work
along the winding backroads
a darting from the left
two gray squirrels,
scampering in tandem
right in front of me
on the double yellow lines
I stop for them
they stop for me
after a moment
of squirrel contemplation
one continues on across
but the other, the other
turns back
with something in its mouth
not an acorn, something hanging
pale-colored
I’ve never seen the likes
but instinctively know:
that’s a baby squirrel
and on I drive, thinking
of the old squirrel twins book
my grandmother read to me
so long ago
and of how I shall read it
to my own granddaughter
arriving in a few short weeks
the morning September sun shimmers
rose-gold in my rearview mirror
like promises steeped in time
I no longer dream of dying
like I did when I was nine
now, in my first tinge of autumn
I dream of new babies born
every night

*******
with thanks to Sarah Donovan at Ethical ELA for the inspiration to write poetry
around moments of knowing “I am alive.”