Chalk on Pavement

September 22, 2014

By Tami Mohamed Brown

At the far end of the empty park-and-ride lot, a silver Toyota jerks its way across the yellow painted parking lines in starts and stops.

Someone, presumably, is learning to drive.

Sprawled sideways on the ground, I pull an oversized piece of pink sidewalk chalk across the uneven cement, my hand echoing the jerks of the car in an attempt to carefully form letters on a square of pavement next to the bus shelter, the rough concrete cold under my hands.

The car pulls up to me, next to the words I’ve written on the pavement. I stand and wipe my dusty fingers.

“What are you up to over here?” asks a man through the car window.

I haven’t thought about why I’ve started this practice of rising early to leave quotes lying on the ground in wait of readers.

My answer–its preciousness, its awkwardness–surprises me.

“I’m leaving a love note. For anyone who’s looking.”

“It’s Emily Dickinson,” I add, blushing.

A girl gets out of the car, door left ajar, to examine the pavement.

“Morning without you is a dwindled dawn.”

Although they are not my own words, I feel exposed.

“It’s beautiful,” the girl confirms, and we stand, studying the ground as if it were the shore of the Pacific Ocean, or the Taj Mahal. As if it held something far more permanent than words written sloppily in chalk on an early morning sidewalk.

 

 

 

Tami Mohamed Brown has been the recipient of a Minnesota’s Emerging Writer’s Grant, a Loft Mentor Series Award, and a Blacklock Nature Sanctuary Fellowship. Her work has appeared in Brevity, Mizna, Sweet, and elsewhere. She lives in Bloomington with her family and finds inspiration on her daily bus commute to her office job in downtown Minneapolis.

Photo by Kate Ter Haar courtesy of Flickr

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