They sag in just the way I remember, clotting against each
other in nests of purple and gold, skins thinning and flesh softening in cracks
of sidewalk concrete. As a child I used
to eat them off a tree at the edge of a cotton field, loving them more than wild
plums but not as much as blackberries. Their feral sweetness in my throat
tickled with its hint of something gone to ruin, something almost too wild to
be with. Only once I picked them before they’d ripened, the blister of their
greenness sending me home for water in a hurry, my mouth full of trickery and
insolence. Some years later I made some jam with them. It sat on my shelf in jars
until someone insisted I spread it on toast, and I did. My teeth missed the
skins and the nudge of the pit. Wasps still crawl inside their golden hearts, I
notice now, intoxicated with loamy fruitflesh and the heady disappearing
nourishment of summer.
©Laura Sorrells 2007--2012
all rights reserved