By Alyssa Gregg
I ride the train from Ashton Lane
and pass a children’s soccer match
while walking in the young evening dusk,
casting my flashlight to the sidewalk.
I phone a friend and swear
that I will Uber home, dear lord.
Google Maps was not kind tonight,
but I find my treasures nonetheless—
most asleep, but two standing, majestic beacons.
I reach fingers through the fence
and brush my hand along one’s horns
still on the phone, giggling and giddy,
chanting, “Good cows, good cows!”
I switch my camera into night mode
(Oh, Android, you are my messiah)
Although the cow pulls away from me,
disturbed—I am still warmed.
All bangs and splutters—such a sound
repeats in my head the journey home,
compels me to stop in the airport
to buy myself a friend just like it—
auburn, plush, and soft with a plaid cap.
Fondly, I name him Lachlan.
Alyssa Gregg (she/her) ‘25 is a television, radio and film major with a women’s and gender studies minor, from Northeast Tennessee. She enjoys writing, crocheting, and playing piano in her free time.