I am camping out on the porch.
It's a small, glassed-in room with windows on three sides. It has a daybed, a chair, a single bookshelf, and, inexplicably, a small rocking horse. Most crucially, I can't hear the baby from there.
We're taking shifts at night, so when I'm not on infant duty, I head to the porch. The daybed is not particularly comfortable, but it a flat surface, and when I lie down on it I can stare out the window into a wash of green. Most often, what I do on the porch I sleep. But sometimes, for just those few beats before exhaustion snatches me up like a hawk, I stare out at the branches of the trees. It's the fat part of the July and they're in full regalia, draped with leaves, stuffed with birds, limned by scraps of a blue so far gone to black I almost miss its color. When the last of the light drains away, they vanish, but I seldom make it that far.
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