Apacha, your dog,
approaches the bed and whimpers. Your body turns and
slides off the mattress. Feet walk down the wooden hallway, hand twists
the knob to the north-facing porch. Brisk air licks the skin. Apacha
steps out into still-black morning. Legs climb back into bed. Body fades and
shuts until pink and yellow light take over the room. Up. Chop
apples into curled wedges, pull long carrots from the fridge. Put both
in bag. Bag in hand. Boots on feet. Feet on dewy earth. Admire
surroundings. Mountain air in lungs. Lungs in body.
The bigger miniature donkey hee-haws then mounts the smaller miniature donkey. Good morning to you too. Two sturdy, old horses approach the fence and poke their noses into the plastic bag in hand. Pull out two carrots and let their mouths chew with their gums. Smell the ground on their face. Donkeys get apples. Their swollen, sweet heads tilt through the fence. Horse noses bonk your shoulder. The grey-dusted one wants another carrot. It glides into his mouth. The brown one shifts away from the others. Follow him with a carrot. The sheep yell. Bah, bah, bahhing. They wait, impatiently, at their gate.
The bag is empty. Fill the trough until it's spilling with water. Tell Apacha stay. He's nestled into the ground, blending with the tall, gold grass. Amber eyes follow. Yellow lines follow. Black globes follow. Follow the sun-drawn shadow to the pen. Unhook bottom latch. Unhook top latch. Pull open. Step back. Watch five earth-toned bodies--sand, dirt and night--hop out and run down the driveway. Apacha watches them. Watch Apacha. Stay.
The bigger miniature donkey hee-haws then mounts the smaller miniature donkey. Good morning to you too. Two sturdy, old horses approach the fence and poke their noses into the plastic bag in hand. Pull out two carrots and let their mouths chew with their gums. Smell the ground on their face. Donkeys get apples. Their swollen, sweet heads tilt through the fence. Horse noses bonk your shoulder. The grey-dusted one wants another carrot. It glides into his mouth. The brown one shifts away from the others. Follow him with a carrot. The sheep yell. Bah, bah, bahhing. They wait, impatiently, at their gate.
The bag is empty. Fill the trough until it's spilling with water. Tell Apacha stay. He's nestled into the ground, blending with the tall, gold grass. Amber eyes follow. Yellow lines follow. Black globes follow. Follow the sun-drawn shadow to the pen. Unhook bottom latch. Unhook top latch. Pull open. Step back. Watch five earth-toned bodies--sand, dirt and night--hop out and run down the driveway. Apacha watches them. Watch Apacha. Stay.
Pull
the pocket knife from the pocket. Cut into the bales of hay. Pull out
six flakes. Disperse into three piles. Hop onto a fence post and push
the hay off the sweater. Pull it from shirt, bra. Watch the equines lift
hay into their mouths. Listen to this sound--the satisfaction of
swallowing, the simpleness. Watch the day turn blue. Bold,
vulnerable blue. No cloud. Naked blue. Swim in this blue. Swallow this
blue. Sit on that fence post for longer than expected. There is
nothing else to do. No one to respond to. This is your place right now.
This spot on this post. Listen. Listen. The blue bird flutters into blue sky.
Apacha approaches the other side of the fence, sits on the ground and looks at you. Expectantly. Whimpers. Okay, okay. Respond to him. Hop over the fence. Fill two buckets with water for the sheep. Unhook the latch to the pasture and walk the fence line. Watch Apacha sniff. Watch him test bits of horseshit in his mouth. He jogs to you. Watch the age in his hips. His two back legs come together as one. Hop, hop, hop. Watch his tongue flap from the side of his mouth. Walk into silver-tree limbs. Walk into pines decorated with the last of the aspen leaves. Christmas trees. Golden globes. Inhale the forest. Caress pine needles.
Apacha approaches the other side of the fence, sits on the ground and looks at you. Expectantly. Whimpers. Okay, okay. Respond to him. Hop over the fence. Fill two buckets with water for the sheep. Unhook the latch to the pasture and walk the fence line. Watch Apacha sniff. Watch him test bits of horseshit in his mouth. He jogs to you. Watch the age in his hips. His two back legs come together as one. Hop, hop, hop. Watch his tongue flap from the side of his mouth. Walk into silver-tree limbs. Walk into pines decorated with the last of the aspen leaves. Christmas trees. Golden globes. Inhale the forest. Caress pine needles.
Walk
to the stream. Pick up feathers. Pick up bones. Hold them. Hold the
life they were before. The strength they give now. Finger them in your
pocket.
You are living.
You are living.
Watch
Apacha dip into stream and take long licks of it. Stand
there at the perimeter. Rub the bones in your pocket. Swim in the
naked sky. Stand still.
Write lines in your head for when the night turns into star dots.
Write lines you'll forget by the time you get back.
Write lines in your head for when the night turns into star dots.
Write lines you'll forget by the time you get back.
Align the bones into new bodies. Put the feathers above your bed.
Fill the kettle with water. Grind coffee beans.
Lovely. Looking forward to more.
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