By Mary Rohrer-Dann
Full moon. High tide. High seas. Pacific sweeps
across the 101, laps the dunes,
forces our patio dining indoors
where waves slam the plate-glass windows,
where the teenage girl at the next table shrieks
as each wave hits, her temples wet with sweat.
We laugh with her family as she subsides
to anxious giggles until the next wave
crashes. And the next. It gets a bit much.
She gasps, says something about apocalypse.
Her parents frown. Beside us, a grizzled
surfer dude sucking a crab claw hisses.
I nod sympathetically to the girl,
give her a thumbs up.
But then the waiter brings our dinners.
We leave her to her fear, which is really rage,
and which we (our years mostly behind us)
pretend is youthful theatrics so we
can focus on the bounty mounding our plates.
I lift my fork as another wave hits,
a window seam splits,
a trickle of sea seeps across the floor.
I angle my chair away.
Beyond spider-webbed glass, ghost-white gull
flies low over white-toothed water.
Searchlight moon looms closer,
illuminates
our faithless faces.
*(Greta Thunberg, Glasgow, 2021, after COP26 climate summit)
MARY ROHRER-DANN is author of Accidents of Being: Poems from a Philadelphia Neighborhood and two other books of poetry. Her work most recently appears in Clackamas Review, Flash Boulevard, Literary Mama, Slant, Five South, Orca, Indiana Review, and Comstock Review. She writes, paints, hikes, bikes, sometimes gardens, and volunteers with various local nonprofits. Find her at maryrohrerdann.com.
This poem originally appeared in Stonecoast Review Issue 21.
Photo by Gabriel Tovar