44 East
“Where are you going Dada?” Strongland asked.
"I don’t know… When you get older, sometimes, just go some way you’re not sure where it will take you.”
I slowed and turned right off the highway
A lazy bend drizzled over rolling folds of southern prairie
We’d never been down 44 East
Nothing more than chicken scratch in the dirt
At least that’s all the secret you are let in on
Like everything else, until you look for yourself
We left the car running
Stepped softly onto the ochre dust
Toward an abandoned school bus
Now part of the old reaching pine copse
Clustered
Like the last children that departed this decaying carcass of rust long ago
Not wanting to leave this part of their lives just yet
A relic of souls
You have to figure those children have grown old
Had children of their own
Passed on
Returned to the Alabama clay
Under the shadow of campaign signs for America’s next President
Red earth now
Not white
Not black
We picked wildflowers
Tucked them inside the cracked and ruined headlight clusters
An exchange of broken glass for shards of vibrant color
There is beauty to find, even in the discarded
Be the light where there once was but has faded
A lesson to carry at every turn
We cross to cotton fields
Dappled shocks of white
He pulls the dense, white fibers apart with gentle hands
I tell Strongland, “One day you’ll know the history of this plant”
It’s America
Grace and thorns
Blood from dark skinned women and men
Stained cotton
Holding steady under a bruised sky
Pierced by the boiling October sun
Promises of storms
Where will you go Strongland?
Where will you go, America?