By
Patricia Wellingham-Jones
Next to the road amid burned
oaks,
seared dirt, a grotto stands.
Its back
wall a lava rock high as
a man’s neck,
jagged, lichen-scorched
from recent fire. Side
walls—piles
of the rough stone, cairns
balanced
at the end of each wing.
Inside the hollow
propped on a slab of cedar
bark
flowers riot in red, orange,
pink paint.
The Virgin of Guadalupe
nestles
with photos in crevices.
Rosaries, strings
of plastic flowers, toy
trucks dangle.
A perch for ravens and
quail, open
to wind and rain, the grotto
calls forth memories
of all those who never
returned home.
Patricia
Wellingham-Jones is a two-time
Pushcart Prize nominee,
author of Don’t Turn
Away: Poems About Breast
Cancer, Apple Blossoms at
Eye Level, and Welcome,
Babies as well as editor
of Labyrinth: Poems &
Prose. She has been published
widely in print and online
journals and anthologies.
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