Sometimes I wish I was living in a crossroads town,
less than really, a
bar, a grocery store, a water tower,
far away from any
place of consequence. Here heat is a cube,
in summer; people
are encased in it, flies in amber.
You walk outside to
look at the day, then retreat inside again;
time is irrelevant;
all day is heat, every hour the same
till night comes.
Nothing of note has happened since the sixties:
a fire that gathered
the population together for six hours,
smoked for a day or
two, then went out;
that old shop’s
still there like a rotten tooth.
There’s no traffic
to speak of, the wires come in on high poles,
the line of them,
askew in places; you see them into the distance;
there’s nothing on
the landscape to obscure the view;
turn your head,
ditto in the opposite direction.
When a wind gets up,
it lifts the dust, everywhere’s covered;
the view through a
window gives a grey tone to the landscape,
but that’s fine,
dust is part of the appeal.
People are old; they
grew old while they were still young;
it is their way of
dealing with the heat and emptiness; their faces
are parched soil
with bright eyes embedded, and they’re gentle.
Time has stopped in
my town; there’s no one racing with it,
there’s no point;
that’s the way I like it.