Ranie Mae ❲2027❳
She counts the drops on window glass, each one a year she’ll never get back. The garden drowns, the mailbox sags, but Ranie Mae just hums in black.
Rain on the tin roof, Ranie Mae hums low — a name like a lullaby, slow as May’s first growl. ranie mae
Oh, Ranie Mae, why’d you run so far? Chasing thunder in a borrowed car The rain keeps falling, the road keeps bending Ranie Mae, is this the ending? If you meant something else by “ranie mae” (e.g., a typo for “rainy May,” or a specific cultural reference), just let me know and I’ll rewrite the piece accordingly. She counts the drops on window glass, each
Ranie Mae always tied her shoelaces twice — once before sunrise, once before stepping off the porch. The town said she was waiting for something. The postman said she was waiting for no one. Oh, Ranie Mae, why’d you run so far
No one knew what she was chasing. But the rain stopped the moment she disappeared. Title: Ranie Mae
Some say she ran from something small — a promise, a porch light, a phone that won’t ring. But Ranie Mae knows: rain answers all. That’s why she never says a thing. (Verse 1) Ranie Mae on a Greyhound south With a cardboard suitcase and a raincoat mouth She left her keys in a coffee can Said, “I’ll be back before I understand”
One May morning, the rain came down so hard the road turned to river. Ranie Mae walked straight into it, umbrella closed. They found her boots on the other side, laces still double-knotted, pointed east.