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Willingham's on the by-pass was the place they always took dead cars. If a teenager caught a deer on the hood late at night
or a mother coming from the grocery rode the Hartford Highway curve too fast, the ride ended here. Locals came by the little store on the fringes of town
to buy a glass bottle of coke and some peanuts or maybe a pack of camels, because they felt like they ought to buy something to make it look like they stopped for a real reason. Menfolk
stood side by side maybe smoking talked up death in low bass tones avoided looking at the wreckage. Women and children met
it head on, talked with exclamation points, speculated on impact. Just above the site under lights on tall black poles local spirits
gathered bathed in orange wash gazed down knowing a few pilgrims would join them soon. Steady stream of people tributary swelled with loss
each small group thin talk each taking up where the other left off ready to run if offered a turn at the wheel.
This poem will appear with a selection of KayDay's other poems in the anthology Links to be published by PoetWorks Press in late spring, 1999.
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