He was smaller than me and blonde.
He was light and elfin, with quick hands and a knowing smile.
He was innocent and childlike,
slow speaking and sure of himself for such a young man.
He worked on his car parked on the hot blacktop of the parking lot,
while I drank beer and made him laugh.
He sold that car to a friend before he left town.
I would see it around, black and gold and fast,
with someone else at the wheel.
He has been gone a long time now.
We were just kids back then,
though I knew more of the world than he.
Back to the Midwest of childhood he went,
to build airplanes and reach into the blue.
I, left behind, found you.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
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