The cracked creekbed sang with heat that afternoon.
My eyes scoured the brush for shed snakeskin
When far off the dazed whistle of a train
Woke in me your sighing
In the close bedroom where I watched your chest
Heave, swilling the dead air.
Your wedding photograph
Stared stiff-faced from the dresser
As immaculate in your tight black shoes
And vest, your youth havoced with the worn face
That was Grandfather. Dawnlight
Razoring through cracks in the shutters
Chattered on your false-teeth gleaming in a jar…

How unreal to know you those fifty years ago,
Your shambling red-faced innocence as you waltzed
Her round the yard, her hard
Unpractised kiss smearing lipstick on your cheek
As you drove off waving from the stovepipe-black Ford
That racketed and jolted across the rutted prairie,