Pearls by Jennie Farley They met at a tea dance, perfectly matched. My mother with newly bobbed hair, my father debonair in grey flannels. In snapshots they are always turned to each other. The day he died, she wept, Who will be here now to fasten my pearls? On this anniversary I watch my mother, a frail form in her old winter coat, buffeted by sleet as she searches for the tree we planted in his memory. Suddenly she turns to me, smiles, holds out her hand. She is a girl again. And to some ballroom music only she can hear, we are dancing together, waltzing, in and out of the willows.
Commended prize, 2015 |