Past Poetry by Zary Fekete

Janos picks up his friend's aunt and remembers her love of Hungarian poet Petofi. Image generated with OpenAI A text message arrived one morning from my friend. His aunt was arriving from the countryside that morning for her annual physical. She was planning to stay at the apartment of her two oldest friends, two spinster sisters, but the friends were out, just then, at a cherry-picking festival. Would I be so kind to collect his aunt at the train station and usher her to the apartment until the sisters arrived home later that day? The key would be under the mat. I checked my schedule, and, finding no other occupations in my morning, I sent him back a short response asking for the arrival time of his aunt's train. I boarded the tram for the station, and, as the car slowly moved through the streets, I tried to remember what I knew of my friend's aunt. I met her when my friend and I were in high school together, when she still lived here in the city. She had liv...