Published in Edition Five (2024) as part of the Tales of an Unforgiving Land column.
I don’t cry anymore when I drive by the creek.
Dried up
alongside my mind
filled with cotton wool clouds
I’ve gotten softer.
I think back to when
summers were colder,
wetter,
more predictable.
Now the kumquat trees can’t
even birth on
time because they’re
stuck
in the waiting room,
understaffed and underloved.
Drier eyes and stonier faces,
a sign of time’s bandage
Mum says but
I think I’ve gone backwards,
somehow.
I’m more like the girl who left
caked creek mud on the flat
of her palm to
watch it crack and dug to
brown skin underneath
red earth
than the last time I came back.
Maybe I’m finally old enough
to time travel.
Tall enough
to see over all
the multi-storey barricades
where I used to stand,
looking into her eyes filled
with lemon seeds,
sticky fingers and
hope for herself.
She had enough faith in the tank to
make it one way but
now I’ve stalled out
half-way
back.
Will she come and meet me?