Here in the land of
churches and gas stations,
we move sparingly and slow
in the simmering heat.
Peach fuzz rises with the sun.
Days, over-exposed and glittering,
melt into the same twenty four hours
of recycled white noise.
Asphalt softens like canal bank mud
around concrete malls.
Outside, roses cremate
themselves colorless;
blackbirds haven’t the energy
to flap or complain.
A slow freight screams,
drags itself toward the cool Pacific,
steel and grease churning
along burning rails.
I sweat, leaning into the open vents
of a straining swamp cooler,
pregnant, nineteen and newly married,
breathless in some dark corner,
wondering how the hell
we ever made it this far.