She goes in an afternoon sun. It’s hot,
hot like you’ve never seen it; southwest
sun meets continental fury & still the
bed is cold. So she is parts of a person,
fractured through the places she knew
you; shoulder to wheel, hand on thigh,
less than you have ever been. How you
tasted trouble & you never changed your
mind. How she was born early & you
were born ready & the two of you never
bore much of anything. Nobody knows,
she used to remind you; nobody wants
to hear it. So remember the horses &
the people who brought them to town.
How the cities spat you out. The way she
falls out of love. Tuck it all in your back
pocket like a kerchief. It’s American to
love like this, to shield your heart with
metal & make somebody pull the trigger.
But you’re not the sheriff & she’s not the
outlaw & I was never much of a cowboy
at all. So I ride into the sunset & I leave
the smoke behind. I strip myself clean &
I tell myself truths & I find life over the
horizon.
I hope you can, too.