--John A. NievesOctober happens this way—a quick heat fools the bottomleaves greener while the topleaves are already wreathedin old fire.On the sidewalk, the crowdis jacketed, or not jacketed, eitherwhispering jokes or prayers.There are no clouds, butsomething about the skyimplies rain.The papers fill with adsfor masks, peoplewith the urge to hidein plain sight.Crows become buzzards.Slats disappear from ancientfences. Memories dial oldnumbers, find them disconnected,call back anyway.Somewhere just abovethe horizon, the day moonrealizes it is naked, butnot dreaming.A squirrel plants a treeno one will hang frombut all the doors that promisesomething sweet are still closed.
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