The sun is dead fish's eye buried under
a cloudy sky
the color of poisoned water. On a road
twisting through
several of several hundred thousand
forgettable towns,
I am in awe of the optimism of children
waiting for snow
and believing in Santa Claus; they are
roaming in groups
along broken up pieces of sidewalk and
gravel side streets.
In another life, I imagine I am a lip
reader and as I drive by,
I try to find out what they are saying
–
it may make a difference later.
The farmers say this winter will be
worse than the last two;
but farmers are cynics and have grown
used to complaining
about things they have no control over.
They will prepare
and they will pray, and they will watch
the price of corn
and soy. I have nothing to offer them –
not even the secrets their children
discuss
while they're cutting school and
imagining for a moment
that they're really getting away with
something.
When I step down from the cab of the
truck
I can feel the ground freezing through
the soles
of my shoes; the next snow will stick,
I think. Walk into a gas station,
trying to ignore
the soreness of my feet that give me
preternatural age. There's a line
and the woman behind the counter is
busy flirting
with the boy in front her who is
clearly trying
to buy cigarettes without
identification –
in spite of all the commercials that
echo in my head
I hope he succeeds. In the back of the
line,
there is a young woman crying. No one
is paying attention.
All women look like little girls when
they cry
and they all remind me of my daughter.
I can only allow myself to cry when I'm
drunk;
at least then, no one will think it's
genuine. Leaving town
a black cat crosses my path. And I am a
little surprised
that I find it comforting.
0 comments:
Post a Comment