The haze of a distant fire flattens the light on the knolls beyond the sageflats. Their half-tone silhouettes jagged by tall pines. The rumble of the engine as I stand beside the truck with the door open, surveying the horizon. Locusts crackling. A patchwork of shadows washes over the flats. Steel-gray clouds above. The wind kicks up sparse columns of dust. A lonely road and a shot-up gate. A glimmer in the dirt. Brass. Nine millimiter. Discharged and forgotten. The lock on the gate has been grazed by bullets. Maybe this one. The shadows wash over outcroppings of lava rock amid the tall sage. Nooks and crannies. Places to hide.
A gust of wind and I am standing in the shade and my eyes relax as a prairie falcon glides over the road to survey the far side for something to eat, close enough I can almost hear the beating of his wings and suddenly zigs up and then charges toward the ground and then he has gone.