Vapor Wake
By Mary Ruefle
Intelligence came on
 about seven o’clock
 that evening, without
 any warning, for the
 first time in two or three
 months—I’d been crying,
 my eyes were Christmas bulbs,
 love had dropped its honeydew
 and my mind was splattered
 when suddenly I heard Edith Piaf
 singing in the next room
 and remembered that pretty souvenirs
 were manufactured after the war
 to be bought by soldiers
 who had greatly suffered,
 pink rayon handkerchiefs
 with the flags of two countries
 embroidered there—lo,
 I could leave these shores,
 I could sail home, I could
 take something with me,
 I could leave something in
 return, and at that word
 it came back, alive.
Source: Poetry (May 2020)


