The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Jen Garfield
CINDERELLA SWAMP WEED
After we graduate and before we leave the Midwest for good, we pack the car for our last trip together. We trace a route
on the big road atlas with orange marker. Leave before dawn so when the sun rises we’re too far from the city to remember
where we came from. Each night we heat canned soup over a propane stove and look for the Milky Way. When the car stereo
breaks, find a hand-held radio at an outlet mall and listen to local news. Somewhere near Lake Superior, we buy a yard sale book
printed on pulp paper called Varieties of Milkweed. You drive, I read aloud:
Milkweed: A common weed. Scientific name: as-klee-pea-us. Also known as Milk Maid. Ice-Ballet Weed. Green Comet Weed. Soon,
you’ll be on your way to California in a U-Haul, mattress strapped on the roof. I’ll be on a plane to New
England with three duffel bags, no apartment. Keep going, you say:
Monarchs lay their eggs in sprouted milkweed, then winter in Florida or Mexico. When they leave, the milkweed’s poison offers the larvae protection.
The next page is a giant picture of Cinderella Swamp Weed. I don't feel like reading anymore so I tear it out and place it on the dashboard.
We leave it there for the rest of the trip. Let the sun shine through. When it rains, I hold the weed out the window. It begins to grow.
OVER THE DASHBOARD Farmland skimmed by like sped-up microfiche on our way out of town--
We weren’t looking for anything in particular, skimming headlines
from August 1996 with your soft hand on my thigh. We were
driving for always, Neil Young on the tape deck, nodding
like we were seeing the same visions in the same fields.
I remember the air turned musky without time passing. Farmhouse
lights popped up like bells. The stars were indigo and we thought we would
see into our future for a long time. What I’ve wanted
since that car ride, even before it took your life, was to gaze
at a flaky screen with the news passing by unseen. Even now,
years later, I want to sit next to you in the still dark corner
of the public library, to watch the stars over the dashboard, to see for a long time.
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