though their ranch was as flat as any Kansas cornfield
the slopes cursed them with wicked storm now and then
but other than a few shingles off a roof and a steer or two struck by lightning, their place was no worse for the wear
Father and Son ran this place as did two generations before them,
and after chores one eve they watched a flood they thought only God could command
they flipped a coin to decide who would take a truck of supplies and who would stay to tend to the herd
the boy won the toss--just as well the old man figured; his spirit was not as ready for the road as it once was
he helped his boy load all the pickup would hold and his only son left on a clear dawn
he sliced the Oklahoma Panhandle while most folks were still eating breakfast
Amarillo was in his rearview by lunch; he had a hunch he could make it all the way there by sunrise the next day
odds are he would have, had a fleeing Houstonian not fallen asleep at the wheel and pulled into his lane under a midnight sky
the doctor from a Texas town with a name the father wouldn't want to remember assured him his boy went fast...and didn't suffer
once the father got his son's mangled body in the ground,Β Β the old man took his grief straight to the store, filled up another truck and left his stock to fend for themselves, as he took a journey his boy was not destined to complete
he didn't shed a tear while he unloaded the supplies on a new coastal plain, amid scores who did not lose a son
though surely he was not the only one, he thought, who would cry himself to sleep that very night
where waters his son never saw receded, far from where the mountains meet the plain