Ecuador
By Amy Nocton
Posted on
Where did we sleep before time betrayed us and I learned to carry my grief
like a carapace
under
which I sometimes shelter? Years ago, those boys slipped into the tortoise shell
wearing yellow slickers
sleek
with sweat and island rain. Lemon laughter resonated through the space
and likely loops,
lingers
there trapped in a layered, timeless echo. They were our flock
of flightless cormorants,
tea
stained and dolphin dizzy as they traipsed across the rocking decks at night
and boogied bare-
foot
among the blue footed boobies by day. On an icy glacier they spied the Cotopaxi
Andean slinky fox
search
for a meal amongst the snowbound rocks and volcanic black. The intrepid young travelers
leaned into stories
spun
by my brother, storyteller, weaver of wonder and masquerader of mischief,
skilled at finding
fun.
We loved those boys, and, beneath the Ecuadorian sun, we parented them before
our own baby
morphed
into a struggle, a sadness, a teen shaken and confused,
a lone individual
isolated
in a world that knows not how to encompass one so bright—an island self—a library learned,
art, books, and
cosmos.
– Amy Nocton