I thirst fiercely in the desert; I spy oases in the sky. I've come to the edge of Mosaic Canyon. There's nothing to drink but the surface of stone. I try licking the tiny pools of rain water filling cracks in the boulders. But they, too, are illusions packed tight below the sky.
If I could survive on colors, I would be sated. Reds, browns and tans. A subtle gray graces the front of the stone where I sit. I must try to **** it dry. Foolishly, I set out hiking without my water bottle. Now I hallucinate streams and gullies in the sand. I can't go on; I must go on.
Cirrus clouds swirl around palm trees. Camels linger at a bubbling pool, settled on their knees. Cold water spills from their gnarled mouths. They have forgotten nothing to survive. I have forgotten everything. Soon I hear my name being called. It echoes down the canyon.
I stumble backward, ankles slanting on the stony path. All along, I keep my eye on the sky. The vision never wavers, only intensifies. The canyon walls box me in. I cannot catch my breath. Behind me, my wife calls and calls me to safety. In her hand, a cup of cold water.