The ocean holds
salt.
Fresh water gathers
in a depression.
One cannot litigate
against deluge.
Given time—
these memories—
one from another.
Sediment settles everything.
Prose and Poetry by Alley Greymond
The ocean holds
salt.
Fresh water gathers
in a depression.
One cannot litigate
against deluge.
Given time—
these memories—
one from another.
Sediment settles everything.
3/22/2026 (c)
It doesn’t matter the season.
Everything feels like winter.
The
moon—
a frigid glow
caught in branches.
The
knight strains
to feel anything
beyond the pose.
His
cup—spilled
into aspen roots
that take it without question.
What
remains is duty.
No
one remembers
what that means.
Written in 1993. Revised 3/22/2026. (c)
Above the line of hard-hack and dune
three kites rise and fall like seabirds.
It is the wind, not the kites, that create
music.
My mother mistook endurance for love.
My father takes any woman who’ll let him
and my mother thinks her anger will one day
draw him back.
It doesn’t.
She kills herself --
Whiskey for dinner,
a twelve-hour six-day work week—
what would it take for him to notice.
Smoking, nail biting,
making high-risk choices,
We are all killing ourselves for him.
My friends and I, no wiser, married
illusions that faded
until we faced that love
does not transform us.
I cannot see it. I pretend it does not exist.
It is easy to ignore, to move that sound
back behind the wreck of wind and wave.
3/21/2026 (C)
At the
upright, I suffered switched knuckles;
the
metronome kept perfect time.
Emotions
require a steady tempo—
Allegro had its
place.
I’ve come to
prefer Adagio.
Could I ever
be at ease?
At 2 a.m.
jam sessions with his buddies,
Daddy
snapped photos of me on the kit
as though
this were evidence that he was loving.
I looked so
goddamned happy.
Maybe I was.
On top of
the upright, orderly stacked sheet music
defied
gravity—when his stacks took over the table
they overrode
family dinners.
Instruments littered our dining room.
Three trombones—
tenor and baritone
saxophones.
No session
went without water keys spitting, indiscreet,
that stained
the carpet like permanently faded bruises.
There was an
electric bass, and of course,
my two guitars, electric and acoustic.
I couldn’t fret or pluck.
My span always felt inadequate—
a judgment I could never put down.
By the time
I reached high school
boys let me
know music took man hands.
Eventually
drums
crowded the table right out of the room.
One
percussive or another was well within reach.
I favored
the Guiro, for its heft and ease,
though my
patterns were erratic and out of sync
with the
metronome.
Dad brought armloads
of jazz and classical albums
to prove taste.
He
articulated the composer’s name
as though he
and they were regular drinking buddies.
“That’s
De-BUSE-e”, he’d say.
I’d say “deb-u-see” just to hear
him curse me.
August 2016 (c)
This is the dream about you, Babe,
about how you visited me
in my 110-year-old
basement apartment—
The back brick wall failing.
Tree roots cracking asphalt waves.
Windows sooted by vehicle exhaust.
At 33 years to my 56, you are prettier
than the other boys that broke my heart.
My daughter was over with a friend,
I told them they needed to be nice.
Both grimaced.
Dishes piled in the sink,
cupboard door stained with coffee.
My ex-husband, who pops up
in every dream
as though we are still married,
I told him, too,
to be nice, to relax his fist.
Nice--
you don’t even question why…
You texted: here.
I went to the alley-side door—
a drywaller had finished troweling plaster
over the eight-step stairway.
Plaster mud wet—
ankle deep—
the drywaller face-down in the white muck
I went to step around him, or on him,
his glare stopped me.
I went back for my phone—
I couldn’t find where I’d set it down.
The stairs imploded, rolling up
like a window shade.
I ran out the Queen Anne Street side
so that I might find you.
I walked too far,
all the way downtown to Benaroya.
The crowds were dressed for a show.
It rained.
Sun cast a harsh light where it could.
It was out of sequence.
On my way back you texted:
Still here, waiting.
I ran.
I jumped a train.
Caught the bus, finally.
I opened my door to a party
and someone suggested how strange
that I was the last to arrive.
It was already time to go.
I found you, Babe
in the back room with another young boy.
You had been playing building blocks,
race cars, hopscotch
all night.
3/21/2026 (c)
She was some girl!
She ran barefoot
through the neighbor’s yard,
trapped bees between her toes.
When her Brownie troop
went horseback riding,
she watched— outside the barn fence,
her foot—encased in bandaging,
swollen twice its regular size.
She didn’t complain.
Much.
She forgave the bees,
after all, when their stingers went in,
they died.
3/21/2026 (c)
Every summer, Grandma opens the closet
under the stairwell—
pulls out paintings she’d completed that year.
Daddy grabs a beer—
wanders off, the screen door banging
like a mini tantrum.
Momma casts a withering glare
toward the void where Daddy was.
Their wedding gift painting—
hung it where the open front door
could obscure it.
When she lived with us,
instead of contributing to expenses
her savings paid for
painting courses at the community center.
Sometimes she practiced with crayons
or pastel sticks at the kitchen table.
Profiles—
One of my brother,
one of my sister.
None of me.
“I give up. I can’t capture you.”
I stood there,
obscured
even without a door.