In the evenings the deer would emerge from the edge of the woods stepping over the tumbledown stones of walls left untended- they'd leave tracks through the snow in a wandering line that led to the last apple tree in the field by Orchard Street.
I remember that now, staring at this antler I've found in the clearing between the cactus and sun bleached stones. The lines of the antler flow into the fractures of my palm- two thousand miles from snow, and two thousand miles from the blue evening glow of a shivering world glazed over by twilightβ¦
And the deer- magnificent, pawing the snow searching for apples that had fallen below- emboldened by the frozen sweetness of autumn. They were graceful even in flight- when cars with chains jingling and crunching the ice rounded the corner down Orchard Street.
Today I've tracked over two thousand miles in my own wandering line- the lines of the antler flow through the tangles and hollows of time.
Sometimes I stand in a clearing, sometimes hidden by trees, sometimes I scratch below the surface, and I run- but, less gracefully...
There are walls I've left untended and some I've crafted too well- it is through forgotten tumbledown walls that memories come- I thank grace it was into this clearing they fell.