Following tracks of the kangaroo rat, past
Prickly Pear and brittlebush. Salt flats spanning
dunes eroding and rebuilding—days
in the desert shift. Sand carpeting on wind
lifts up and up to sky; stars tear free
in the middle of the night and mineral
deposits line our dawn. Collect them with me,
will you? We have had such little rain.
I want to fill my hands with things that shine.
In the desert, it is possible to measure
years in heat. Sift and comb, we draw
from age its flesh, its flame. Younger
than weather, older than seasons
we have been here all this time. Circling
the sand. I knew you when I saw you
didn’t have a missing half: you had come
alone, and willing; wordless, now,
walking; footprints tend to weave.
A pull between us—a sunbeam,
bent—steady as something true. Above
the sand, above the wind, above
the heat I’ll meet you: I’ll meet you
in the middle. Raising limbs, our
fingertips up and grazing an edge
of cloud; in the moons of our nails,
rain pools; we ease it down. Over
the bridge, we pour it out, relieving
the earth from thirst. Like breathing
feeding a heartbeat. Like lending
life with touch.
.
February 12, 2009
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