The tiptoe hours
There are some wise people
who wake in the dark
and watch the world dawn
over backyard trees.
I am not one of these people.
Most days I greet the morning
with the rising sun
of a child’s eager face before mine.
Then time takes my hand and pulls me
up, up, up
like a rag doll
through the assembly line
of peanut butter toast with honey.
A toddler parked in the curve of my hip
a warm mug cradled in the palm of my hand.
But today —
I sit
like the wise ones.
In a house as still as the country night.
Nobody awake, but me and my shadow.
And the tick, tick, tick
of the wall clock
and the drip, drip, drip
of the coffee maker
and the faint purring
of an oversized
house cat.
Not even the sun
has peeked her head above covers.
And isn’t it peculiar —
the places one finds magic.
For in these tiptoe hours,
I am floating on air.
I am now the conductor
rather than the caboose.
And I dance around the house
in a hush in no hurry
feeling like a fine hostess
prepared to welcome the dawn.
Oh, hello there, my wonderful friend —
There you are —
Come in, come in.
I have been waiting for you.