Boden Lane Cemetery
Faded black lettering peels like birch bark
away from the old white sign
nothing left but shadows and 1812.
A crumbling rock wall held together by clinging ivy
stands like a sentry. I slip between
a granite pillar and a rusty iron gate.
Moss gives way to bare feet, spongy and damp.
Acorn caps crackle; overgrown grass rustles
in the breeze. Headstones drifted
out of their rows and columns
crumbling, sinking, broken
like souls who were lost as time wore away their names.
The air, redolent with summer, lay heavy
with the weight of its ghosts.
Crickets echo the fife and drum.
Mists rise like dawn on the battlefield, and I see
the ragtag, worn out Patriots of our freedom.
I barely stifle a scream and duck
when the first shot rings out.
A car backfires—
suddenly,
I’m just a kid in an old cemetery
playing truth or dare.
Wasn’t expecting the turn at the end. Love the line: Crickets echo the fife and drum.