Gabriella Fee
Blue and Gold
My mother lays a hand on my shaved head
as if I were a figure in a shrine.
The heater’s on
full blast. This afternoon
in the parked Avalon, we’ve talked
epidurals, Lexapro, integrity
of the poetic line, while the sun drops
over Walden Pond. Three bundled men
have cut a hole to fish. Through the amnion,
she says, a sadness must have passed
from her to me. Their navy jackets
darken, indistinct from ice
that looks applied by palette knife.
Its scalloped edges flare.
The secret locals know
is spring’s already here, though snow
will fall through March. The change
is in the light. Its blue and gold
burnished if not warm. From some
opening in our own thinning ice,
my mother pulls a jumping line—
Now, levity! she says,
and starts the car, lifts her right hand
off my head to take the wheel.