The Old Woman With No Cat

old woman and a black cat talking to each other. cartoon

A Cupful of Moon

The old woman with no cat
digs where the crow dropped her house key,
a hole just moonbeam-wide,
neatly spooned between two failures
of courgettes.

Her spade hits porcelain.
Not bone.
Not root.
A teacup …
a drowned saint,
half-sunk in the drought-starved clay,
glazed in sorrow and stained by Earl Grey.

The crack in its side
sings in a language of dust
and Steinbeck.

Or Poe.

“Old woman,” it whispers,
in a voice like torn lace.
The pattern, blue-veined,
spidering just like
the day grief forked itself
into her skin.

It matches the scar where the cat
(the one that isn’t hers),
scratched her with a look
more than a claw.

The crow chuckles from the fencepost:

“The moon’s getting cold.
Bury it deeper, woman.
For archaeology’s sake.”

The clay drinks the moonlight like spilt milk,

as the old woman,
grubby-palmed and smiling,
holds the cup
where a purr should be.


The entire series is available to read here: The Old Woman With No Cat.

(some) images created with Midjourney; all writing is authentically my own original work.©Misky 2006-2026.

9 responses to “The Old Woman With No Cat”

  1. Purr or Pu’er tea?
    ( if you find some, try it; it has a distinct earth-y flavor. I tried it and bought aged Pu’er at Kunming)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ve heard about this tea but never tried it. If I find it, I’ll be sure to do that.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. “Ah, a lovely moon,” said Luna. “And also it’s another name for me.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Good afternoon, Luna and Chris. Happy Easter to you both.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. And to you too… Happy Easter, Misky 🐣

        Liked by 2 people

  3. I lived in a house once that had all kinds of broken glass and porcelain in the soil around it. I still wonder how it got there… this makes me wonder……

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Wonder no more. (grinning) Until the explosion of plastics and mass-produced packaging, everyone buried non-combustible items (like plates, glasses, bones, etc) in their back garden, and often such things were tipped into the outhouse (outdoor toilet) where, when it filled up, was covered with soil and situated in another part of the garden. It’s a gold mine for anthropologists and historians.

      Liked by 2 people

  4. Memories of lives and live’s past are well worth unearthing and wondering over. 💐😃

    Like

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