At Dusk

At Dusk

POETRY

By Russell Karrick

Perched in the branches

of the avocado tree, the chickens

are almost asleep. My son

lifts his head from my chest

and points to them. Each day

I carry him through the yard

at dusk and we hunt for seasonal

trea­sures. Tonight, he spies

amanita mus­caria below the pines

and we marvel at its ruby caps.

In the sky, the moon is not yet

a moon, but I whisper its name

into his ear, and as I begin

to walk back toward the house

he stops me near the guava trees.

I move us closer while he stretches

his arm and, by some instinct

I’ve long lost to reason, plucks

the only red fruit among the leaves.

Photo by Melvin Chavez.

This story orig­i­nal­ly appeared in Stonecoast Review Issue 19. Support local book­sellers and inde­pen­dent pub­lish­ers by order­ing a print copy of the mag­a­zine.



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