
When I was little the state fair concessionaire stands sold pink puffs of spun sugar in paper cones, mesh bags of tiny buttered salt potatoes, paper containers filled with fried fat-bellied clams glistening with oil. Paper cups filled with lemonade made from a squeezed lemon stirred with sugar and cold water.
A single afternoon at the New York State Fair always shimmers up in my mind, me and my father, that man I was so often so afraid of but not on that day, not on that one day when I sat on a red stool beside him, under a red awning there at the fair, drinking lemonade and eating those salty buttered baby red potatoes and fried clams he treated me to.
I was seven and he was thirty-one and he was happy, and I was happy too.
Decades later I stand in my kitchen making lemonade in just that way: A single lemon, big spoonful of sugar, water cold from the tap. Stir and stir and stir.
Forsythias, by C.L. O’Dell
I think about time.
The forsythias
and the man singing
in the car ahead of me.
When I enter the space
the same shape
he made a moment
before me,
where is the music,
the taste of honey
in his mouth and now
mine, the thought
of kissing his wife good-bye
and the words of a song
lifting off my tongue
as if from memory, but his?
What is mine stays with me,
my heart in the glitter
of his heart. My dreams
have no bones. Love
is never saved in layers
of rock. So much of me
will never be found
on this earth.
For more information about C.L. O’Dell, please visit his website.
alisonmcghee.com
Words by Winter: my podcast