in the far east of the sands of the great Mojave with upright cheerful cactus and the Joshua tree for company
(and oh my how they had dug in and held, no small feat in this climate)
An old marker read
here lies Uncle Uncle was my horse it took two days in the hot sun to bury him but he was a very good horse Uncle RIP
the sands had once formed a soft curve over the top of the cowboys hard work but now there was nothing but the weathered marker showing time passed with brittled barn wood heartbreak and memory drifting to the east with it
like the coiling sands and their fine mimic of the rattlesnake slithering to meal twirling off towards the Joshua seeking to pile against him for ease and comfort and some rest
it was surely a very hot wind that had carried the cowboy on after such a loss of a very good horse we will remember him now called Uncle
(i am sure he was a noble steed and even in his eve of passing quite handsome to the cowboy)
and surely that wind carried his sorrowful melody to the Joshua for cowboys often sing very sad songs and the Joshua heard the loss in the cowboy song and most likely wept a fortunes worth of affinity in tears of an evergreens nurture and sheltered him a moment in kind
the cowboy head off long long ago in search of a hopeful Eden in search of new companions to lift his weariness and place his boots
but for the Joshua his surprising elevation and ability to watch and remember long after the timber fades to forget nobody would
and the sad cowboy in the blink of an eye far from the sands now to the west and under his own stone and the worn down of it
and i become the Joshua and feel the time of this into my depths though they may be shallow they are strong they know their fortune and are kind to what is buried near