Rita Lo Que El Agua Se - Llevó [upd]
She made coffee. She opened her notebook to a fresh page.
The first time the river rose, Rita was seven. She watched from the porch as the brown current swallowed her mother’s rose bushes, then the tire swing, then the fence that had never been straight. Her father said, Don’t cry for what the water takes. It only borrows. rita lo que el agua se llevó
One afternoon, after a storm that split a pine in her backyard, she found a wooden box wedged between two rocks. Inside: a dried flower, a pocketknife, a strip of cloth embroidered with the name Rita in faded thread. Not her name. Someone else’s Rita. Some other Rita who had lost things to the same indifferent water. She made coffee
She closed the box and put it on her shelf. Then she went back to the river and wrote one more line in her notebook: She watched from the porch as the brown
At seventeen, a flash flood dragged away the footbridge where she’d had her first kiss. The boy’s name went with it — something with a J, she thinks, or maybe a soft ch — and she didn’t mind that loss. What she minded was the way the river remembered things she wanted to forget. Every spring, the melted snow from mountains she’d never seen would bring back a rusted toy, a photograph, a single child’s shoe. The water gave and gave, but never what she asked for.
