“Calico Trail,” New Era, June 1997, 51
Calico Trail
Stained calico hangs
neatly on a peg,
accusing me of leaving
the old hearth fire for a land
where starved dust clouds
grow taller than the poplars.
I am the desert red
that creeps into every space
between the sagebrush, grass, teeth,
the cracked churn for butter
brought across the great emptiness,
the rough pine bread board,
the summer clouds that gather
at the valley’s edge, taunting.
Sometimes I am the storm
that teases the dust fields to be green.
Always, I am accustomed to
the slanting farmhouse porch,
the heat from days without rain,
the cricket songs,
and the creaking of the loom
that promises fresh calico
in a week.