Ghosts in the Tree Stands

written By

The family farm was never quiet.
Pine needles held every sound
a snapped twig,
the creak of a laddered stand.

On any trail,
a cousin or uncle might appear,
just a nod,
no words.

Orange jackets
hid in the branches,
watchers stitched into the timber,
holding their rifles steady.

Now the faces
blur into seasons,
a custom fading,
a tradition I still follow.

The stands remain.
Shadows swing
between bark and wind.

Winter comes,
and I walk the old paths,
listening for a rustle,
an echo in the leaves.

They are gone,
orange erased from the backdrop,
but the trees remember,
scattered figures in the timber,
waiting with me.

 

Author

  • Patrick G. Roland is a writer and educator living with cystic fibrosis. He explores life’s experiences through poetry and storytelling, seeking to inspire others in the classroom and through writing. His work appears or is forthcoming in Hobart, scaffold, Emerge Literary, Unleash Lit and others.

    Roland

Share this:

Comments are closed.

Up ↑