Poem: Distant Lights Of Olancha Recede
The boy, my boy
Lets the full charge fly
The sound is masked by the rolling thunder peeling off the Sierras
Late desert evening, getting black, getting feral
The kilns haven't felt fire for a hundred years, but the boy lets another one go
Pushed backed by the recoil, and another one
The slug hits the dirt and splinters of lead have a life of their own as the thunder sends signals of yes and no
You belong but you don't belong
Fat owl changes cottonwoods, staring
Twenty year old boots scrunch the sand as the rains are only yards away
Red packed highway going east to Keeler
Distant lights of Olancha recede in the caked mirror
An hour and a half to Four Corners, then we're home, boys
A day and a half, then we're home, boys
A year and a half, a century
Then we're home
Boys