“Road Trip,” New Era, Sept. 1999, 21
Road Trip
Tight-packed.
A capsule speeding
down miles of interstate,
Checking off time zones
like items on a grocery list:
Eastern, Central, Mountain, Pacific,
Swallowing dashed yellow lines as ohio melts into
indiana into
illinois into
iowa.
Driving
in one direction.
Pausing
only for gas, bologna sandwiches,
bathrooms, and sleep.
Thinking as far ahead
as the next Super 8.
Everyone naps as the car streams forward.
My mother has her feet on the dashboard,
her seat tipped back touching my knees.
My father switches the stations.
Even during static, his fingers drum the wheel.
There’s a curled-up lump of a sister in the back,
wedged between suitcases, jackets, pillows, and food.
Everything I love in one car.
Tight-packed,
so dangerous,
so safe.