Your Keys
Your Keys
By Erik Roth

They’re attached to our home, a coat
hook on the left when you walk in,
tags for Stop & Shop, T.J. Maxx,
Hallmark gifts, plastic prayer flags
tattered by variable winds, passing
years peeling back their adhesive.

Stage IV’s storm foreshadowed
the groundhog’s warning, predicted
a mix of insidious conditions,
the prospect of an equinox
delayed by fatal disease, a hopeful
prognosis teased by a change

in season. Purple crocus advanced
with your cancer. A raw morning
Saint Patrick’s Day Mass. Parade
of unread intentions collecting
in heaps. Escaping today’s cold,
I’m spring-cleaning, rummaging

for room to breathe, needed space,
tossing out envelopes, junk mail
forwarding your ghost, thoughts
on your ashes, if I ever get rid of
this place. Casting, trenching,
raking—sand in the hourglass

never asked you for plans. Now,
it’s on me to sort through our past,
keepsakes from a lasting winter
hanging about gaps in jambs,
like the chill in our house, your keys’
jangling when the door slams.

Erik Roth holds a BA in English from Colgate University and an EDM in English education from Rutgers. His poems and nonfiction have appeared in Creation Magazine, Discretionary Love, Modern Haiku, Educational Viewpoints: The Journal of the New Jersey Principals and Supervisors Association, and the Journal of New Jersey Poets, for which he received their 2025 New Jersey Poets Prize. He lives as a single parent in an unreasonably clean house in Bergen County, New Jersey, with his teenage son and daughter, who seem to be fairly well-adjusted, despite their father’s OCD.

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