An earlier version of this poem was published in Diode. It appears in my second book, Seize.
Through the fence you look out,
their hooves breaking new earth.
Sleek fur the shade
of bourbon. Kicking up clods
of green. I wheel you closer
to shaken ground. Grandson,
at ten years old, you point at them. Once, I thought
you said the word, horse.
Someday I’ll paint you
the story. Topaz rain galloped
over roofs, barracks thundered. We were the ones
corralled. My hands
on your shoulders, your hand taps
my wrist. Look. They are
flying. Over crests of hills. Running into
the sky. Go far enough, speak
what you can, there’s love
in silence, all things, they come and go.