I never leave the West when it isn’t raining,* My brother says to me through the phone. He is on his way back over the Rockies and through Nebraska. He’ll never make it intact— hands fuse to the steering wheel like nylons on a burn victim, knees and elbows bolted in precise angles keeping the car straight, tires pulling everything forward. One foot is the pedal, one becomes the floor mat.
Shoulder to armpit with a semi truck hauling jet wings from Denver, he notices the paths of rivets like bread lines in Omaha. Some of them are starving.
But where is the rest, the airplane body without its wings? A hollow silo, pilot in a cockpit not going anywhere. I think airplanes molt this time of year. It’s still raining or it will be, the white-lined highways will carry you here unscathed.