The harvest

Still August night. I’m sitting on the hood of his car, clinging to the edge of the broad expanse of white-coated metal, watching him walk to me. I can’t see his eyes in the dim light of the street lamp. His expression is obscure as he lifts my chin.

Now we’re clutched close, lost in a kiss, tender lip to darting tongue. His calloused carpenter’s hands stroke my hair, wrap me tighter. I think over and over: “This is what is happening right now, this is what is happening right now.”

Then, a fast drive through shuddering cornfields, car windows open, my hair whipping around in a pre-knot frenzy. The stalks are taller than I am, still green, with the threat of decay around the edges.

One morning, the fields will be brown. The next week, empty.

I won’t be seventeen forever.