Do the skies
still align
when he isn’t around?
Do the clouds start to hang
and scratch at your head?
Do the streets come to a standstill,
the cement subtly softening,
the tarmac turning delicate?
The whirring city
becoming silent
when his name comes up
mid conversation?
Does his handwriting still strike
you in the chest, just as it used to,
when long drives beneath summer’s skies
felt as though they stretched out
infinitely, when one night felt
like the longest lifetime
and a mile seemed to elongate
out, out
into the distance?
Summers aren’t as long as they used to be
with the shadow of his absence,
his silence,
drooped over the setting sun,
your light stolen too early,
your warm face turned red at that party that night
remembering the mornings when you woke up by his side.
The sand on the beach burns the soles of your feet
but you cannot notice, your mind
happily distracted in a maze of vivid memories.
There’s a fault within the structure.
When you arrive home tonight,
after the sun has faded once more,
try to mask your expectations, realise
that he will not be there.
The gentle humming of the car won’t draw him to the locked door,
he will not open it with baited breath at your arrival.
But someday,
with luck,
that shall be the case
again
and the levees will break,
the orbit will continue
and the mile long string
between these two figures
will turn taut once more
and dance.
About the Creator
Reece Beckett
Poetry and cultural discussion (primarily regarding film!).
Author of Portrait of a City on Fire (2020, Impspired Press). Also on Medium and Substack, with writing featured… around…
Reader insights
Outstanding
Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!
Top insight
Heartfelt and relatable
The story invoked strong personal emotions



Comments (7)
A beautiful poem, indeed. Congratulations in TS!
Congrats Top Story
The imagery of the mile-long string turning taut again is perfect, a quiet hope threaded through longing.
❤️❤️❤️Congratulations For Your Beautiful Top Story🎊
A beautiful and emotional poem about absence, memory, and hope <3
The way you ask if the streets soften and the city goes quiet when his name comes up felt painfully familiar — like grief warping the physics of ordinary places. That image of summers shrinking under the shadow of his absence hit me hard too; it’s such a real kind of loss when even time feels shorter without someone. I love how the ending allows hope in, but cautiously, like it doesn’t fully trust itself yet. When you wrote this, were you holding onto that “someday” as comfort, or questioning whether it’s a kindness or a trap?
Absolutely beautiful and heartbreaking!