6. Aunt Kay’s Funeral
They buried her with gospel songs
and a white carnation.
The preacher said “she’s in a better place,”
but I looked around Anderson
and wondered if I was too.
I walked down streets
I hadn’t seen since my mama was alive—
every brick a photograph,
every step a revelation.
I don’t hate this town.
But I ache inside it.
It is the skin I shed,
and the scar I kept.
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