coyote yelping helps;
the winds, too, distract him
from the now
the Comanche who
put the arrow in his back
lays beside him
gone before him;
that is condign comfort
to him
he cannot speak, nor move
his tongue, but he smells the
*****, the creosote
he sees the clouds,
stingy white whiffs in a hot
summer sky
as good a day to die
as any he reckons, and
he feels no pain
again the yelping,
closer now -- are they talking
about him?
will they beat the buzzards
to his body? would they begin their
feast while his eyes are yet open?
he closes them; the flapping of
the wings does not arouse him--he
knows they are on the Comanche
beaks and talons at work
he lets himself drift, content the
vultures are choosing the dead
but they fly off; the coyote pack
approaches--the pads of their paws
patter on the hard caliche
he lets himself sleep
dreaming now of sweet green grass
and good water
and the coyotes begin their work:
the ***** and he now a solitary offering
for the ravenous dogs