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GREY FOXES
I It was the summer the grey foxes came out of the deep woods to stand on our suburban lawn, screaming at the dying cat, claiming the night for their own. Two nights later, he faded away, became dust and stone. II After surgery, my mother hallucinated that she was alone in the hospital, the last person on earth. She picked up the phone, but there was no one to call. Night after night, she had the same dream, the only one alive in the deserted city. III And then the black day came when the old dog left us; his breath, ragged, foam bubbling from his muzzle. He laid his head down in the dew-drenched grass, a sweet September morning, and never got up again. IV Maybe the foxes were real; maybe they were only a dream. The days rush by, swallows in the wind with their green backs and white throats; they disappear in the shadows when twilight overtakes them. ~Barbara Crooker |
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