I stopped off at the bank to say 'how are you' to the folks who try their hand at the day care of my dollars and the quarters of my pay
I pushed back on a tall gray day, the clouds swirl by in the lead gray sky and I fly over the dry sand ox bow that runs and twists in a necklace below
next, by a purring Toyota, its light glowing blank at a barn wall looking glass Unclip and the gate still open in hind sight, and I am through onto the grass
no paint, no sorrel no grizzled grey hinnie, I walk through the trees tracking the sandy scuff out and up and across the overlook bluff. I hoot n call but never a whinny
There's a house there with a good wire fence The trail turns east over the rough brush heath and on and on and across to a fence, worn neatly down to a barbed wire wreath
and across more brush with a fresh hoof print til the track grows faint but never a hint. And I stoop where nobody sees me in repose thankful a handkerchief wipes more than noses,
So back in a sweaty shirt to the tree line, and there are the horses fresh hoof tracks on the truck where donkey and goat flirt.
bowls of grain and sweet feed to make amend, a handful of wafers to lighten the offering And I brush off what the fly spray left me of dead on the back of my old friend
And I comb out his handsome mane, and pull out his short gold tail and throw up the heavy brown saddle and think again of my good fortune the pretty leather saddle
This time though he stop and consider his options, press on through the scary wind break where turkeys are known to run in conniptions
giving the evil eye to the pile of hay netting the field gate that groans in the wind. landlord's engine spinning quietly the lights burning where nobody looks
Just a word or two, and we are galloping back, easier to urge when returning to the friendly herd, And off to the west where the house that's for sale is and past the dead mans duck pond, home is where the lunch is, and another perfect holiday.