Year’s End

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The fingers lie in the lap,
separate, lonely, as in the field 
the separate blades of grass 
shrivel or grow tall.

We sat together in the little room, 
the walls blotched with steam, 
holding the baby as if the two of us
could breathe for him and were not helpless. 
Upstairs, his sister turned in her sleep 
as the phone rang—

to have wakened to a child’s cry, 
gagged and desperate,
and then repeat that terror when the call 
split the quiet house and centered 
its dire message:
 a child was dead 
and his mother so wrung by grief 
she stared and stared
at the moon on its black stalk, 
the road glistening like wire.
Rubbing the window clear of steam 
as a child rubs sleep from its eyes, 
and looking past the fence to where
he had plunged the sled up and down the hill, 
we could still see the holes his feet made, 
a staggered row of graves
extracting darkness from the snow.
When morning brought the new year in, 
the fever broke, and fresh snow 
bandaged the tracks on the hill.
For a long time we stayed in the room,
listening to him breathe,
like refugees who listen to the sea, 
unable to fully rejoice, or fully grieve.

© Ellen Bryant Voigt