The Lowell Review 2022

Page 135

Section VI

2022

A Hiker I Know carl little

stacks hands on head as he walks through woods pretending he’s captured by the Cong. He does it when no one’s around moving along the path, looking side to side in underbrush, prodded by his captors toward the summit of Beech Mountain where lookout fire tower stands, unmanned, marched past sentinels into camp where he’ll rot in the cage of his imagination, MIA or POW, or forgotten, the draft a bad dream, old arms, now stiff at his sides, right one aching from Covid shot. He pays last respects to fallen trees, each day goes deeper into woods daring himself to lose his way. An Art Blakey saying, “Jazz washes away the dust of everyday life,” seems to make sense as his fingers go numb atop his head, as his footsteps fade to evergreen.

The Lowell Review

121


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.