Drought as Desire
My daughter got ill the year
they tore out eucalyptus
along the 101, roots
suspended in air, no more
orange groves to protect
in a land of mini-malls
I stumbled along my own blockades
believing friends would come
with food in baskets thinking
there were barriers against blackness
when seasons stopped I accepted
drought as though it were life
breathed the scorch of it
(no dinners left by the back door)
while rumors whirled
that some were healed by water
we had no water we learned
to harvest in thirst