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Shore House Sonnets

By Jessica Ambrose

Illustration by Yibeni Tungoe

Decency is simple, not showy—

just being a good human.

I pick up my pen, tracing ripples of dignity,

kindness lessons from grandpa, grandma, and nana

who whispered

we’re all God’s children.

Ash taps from sacred smoke,

drifts over bulrushes. I tried to believe her

even as I wondered whose child I was,

adrift in family names fluttering

like cattails—                 

Put down that phrase.

Everyone matters

Just for being alive. That truth steadies me

like slow tides

pressing my bare feet into soft marsh

mud holding fast, I do not drift.

Back to Baltimore’s cracked sidewalks,

heat-warped asphalt mingled with Nan’s smoke.

My young mother waited tables

under peeling neon

She met him—and his parents— on Mother’s Day.

Patient, steady in her section

as spartina blades bending to bay breeze.

I was ten when he married my mom.

Summers pulled us shoreward,

past Holly Neck,

where time pooled slowly.

Salt air breathed ancient stories into my lungs,

Secrets riding calm pluvial wind.

Backroads lined with centennial pines

old-growth witnesses— oaks of poetry.

Summers where tidal rivers murmured

susurrus hums like a lullaby—

The land rocking us

It had been waiting

to raise us too.

Dusk was magic.

Grandpa tossed a soap bar

through twilight

So, I could wash before supper.

Grandma scattered breadcrumbs for ducks,

their slow dance, teasing soft laughter,

finishing sentences—

unfinished.

That laughter.

I crave that now.

Once I desired becoming—

Now I want to grow in ordinary moments

where the day’s pulse pulses

and washes me into myself.

playing cards with friends, coins clinking,

laughter under lantern glow—

Shadow swept broom moments

marrow-deep, tying me to ancestors

whose fingerprints rest on every

rusted nail of the shore house’s

wide-screen porch.

barefoot through woods,

jumping from piers floating beneath

a burning sun                          

watching heron stalk the shallows,

Ospreys wheel; frogs croak in the dark.

Crackling fire—then the pier broke beneath me.

wood splintering, cold snow-cap water

closing over my head.

A water moccasin slid past.

I thrashed, screamed for him—

steady as spartina, he held me,

carried me back.

holding him, carrying me

Later, bleeding under the summer moon,

I met Daryl

unruly hair, easy dignity.

Unlike his naval kin yet perfectly placed.

I danced westward, years folding into

family years gathered repeatedly by the shore house—

fireworks, late-night howls, warmth by flame.

I called to catch up. He called back.

I didn’t know it would be the last time.

Days later, he was gone.

But some nights when water shifts its tide with the moon,              

I still hear him—calling me in.

A great author said: write

as if everyone you know is dead.

I thought—too easy, I know a lot of dead.

But writing a ghost without judgment

is hard. I write like he’s still here

in the tide’s slow pull back and forth

forth and back a sigh, fire tide laps

crackle salt smoke riding the bay wind,

follows laughter, the tide retreats

by habit, like a jaw that no longer bites right.

My thoughts wander the marshland

to the slow hum of Baltimore streets

Checkerspot wings are black and orange

lifting over meadows—

Only the young trust the air will hold them.


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Posted On: May 9, 2026
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