Sometimes I smell mildew and pine,
and I know it is my grandmother and
I am again awakened by lace curtains
touching my face, breeze blown through
a screen, through a screen where I see
a dirt path go into the woods, a gravel drive
and her wooden garage where her
Chevy waits to be driven. When she
pulls the doors open, the smell of oil,
gasoline, sawdust and age; she opens the door
so I can jump in and sit beside her, just
she and me while the others sleep, down
Wooded Hill and across the Four Corners,
past Saint Andrews and its fine steeple,
the red brick schoolhouse across from the
high school toward the North River Bridge,
through Norwell to the rotary, where the sky
opens up to the sea and gulls call above a row
of shops and cafes and book stores to the point
where the lighthouse stands, has stood at the
Atlantic shore through fogs and storms
and ages of lovers, sunburnt families who
take over the cabins each year. We pull up
where we always pull up to and sit on the bench
we always sit on, out of her purse she hands me
a wrapped in waxed paper piece of saltwater
taffy we suck on and chew and chew on
our thoughts until we search for a lucky stone,
granite wrapped by a white line, on the rocky beach,
storm-tossed smooth. I keep one she finds
in my pocket, always have, to touch, to feel,
to remember who I am and where I come from.