By Deron Eckert
The satellite in what was your yard
brings questions to me from afar.
Are you the one sending them
from wherever it is you are?
Or am I merely asking myself
if an object so large can signal
you out there in what I call
the great unknown and you
knew simply as heaven above?
I ask you to send a message below
when I visit your humble grave,
but the dish on which I used to play
could not be less than five miles away.
And that’s much too far to have
any hope of using it to shout out
to you in the unknown or above.
So, I brush the grass beneath
my feet and at yours with my hand
as if it were your hair, and I feel
not as if you are still near
but as though I can hear
you telling me to appreciate
the beauty in this world
the way you did before
you got sick and not to be afraid
like you were at the end
but curious like you were until
the end because you’ll meet me
up there and alleviate my fear
of the unknown, which you know
to be simple now after you learned
none of us have to go it alone.
Deron Eckert is a writer who lives in Lexington, Kentucky. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Rattle, Door is a Jar, Ghost City Review, Flash Fiction Magazine, Fahmidan Journal, and elsewhere. He is currently seeking publication for his Southern Gothic coming-of-age novel and his first collection of poetry.