DAY MOON SETTING BEHIND CLOUDS 
     September 11, 2014 
 Thirteenth anniversary and my mother’s 
 95th birthday.  Before leaving for work, 
 I dial her at the Care Center. A nursing 
 assistant carries the phone to her room, 
 but my greeting can’t cut through her deafness. 
 Thirteen years ago when her faculty 
 of hearing was intact, she sounded 
 scandalized that I’d even thought to call. 
 “You should be watching the TV!” Driving, 
 I feel gloomy. On a freeway overpass 
 people in what look like fire-fighter or 
 military uniforms energetically 
 shake flags. Bless their hearts, but I don’t 
 honk. Who does?  In the west, a waning, less- 
 than-full moon hovers near the horizon 
 in blue sky between banners of cloud. 
 The moon, the same chalk-white as the clouds, 
 is beginning to set, making me 
 wonder where and for whom it is now 
 rising. For whom in this wide world does 
 the moon shine bright? Now it is slowly 
 lowering into clouds, this moon that is not 
 any less real for its disappearance 
 in the soft white that borders the rim of 
 our planet. For a moment I can still 
 differentiate its curve from the top 
 of the cloud layer, and then I cannot. 
 The flag-shakers even if they stay on 
 the overpass all day eventually must 
 leave. One day even an occupying army 
 has to go home. I stop at a light, 
 lay a dollar in a homeless black man’s 
 hand, tell him, “It’s my mother’s birthday.” 
 Thomas R. Smith 
Illustration Nick Victor

