Against the white siding branches cull a voice from the night; the wind is mute without them.
On the way to work I watch a leaf shake from a tree, leave its place, fall where the breeze sweeps it.
Late in bed I wake from a dream of children sprinting through a sprinkler-- their speckled laughter warms the room like candles in an age of no power.
All at once I feel like a stone on the shore where he first spurned his gods, as I struggle to say: Yes, heaven is nothing without us.
William Neumire has work forthcoming in The Wisconsin Review, California Quarterly, and Redactions. He has published one chapbook titled Between Worlds (Foothills Publishing; www.foothillspublishing.com ). A second chapbook, Need for the Missing, is scheduled to be released soon by Pudding House Press.
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