This dry Spring the parched earth drinks quickly, every cool droplet precious as the tears of the bereaved.
The rain furrows the dusty creek banks like sunken, careworn cheeks. the timid water hurries past sandbars and gravel spits, around balding rocks crowned with rotting riverweed. and in the green places that remain to be sought and found between the highway noise and the factories, there the shy ones grieve with us for all those lost to disease and violence, miscarriage and mischance.
We round the bend; the yearlings start and bolt through the tangled underbrushβ an exercise in their own fragility. The mother does not run. she moves warily a few paces away and meets our gaze: measured, assessing. She takes us in, then bows her graceful neck to the tender shoots that break the hardened clay, the gesture her benediction of peace.