I will remember their care
as I prepare a feast from the bounty
now lifted by the hands of a woman
who hums as she packs my bags.
My serious cashier with
silver hair, shining eyes, a strong-boned face
a sculptor would want to gaze on.
The whistling man in produce
who led me to the bottled horseradish
I would not have found on my own.
In the deli department, the woman
who sang out good morning,
then artfully arranged the chicken chunks
somebody in the hidden kitchen grilled
for my dinner guests and me.
I tell Adonis I have four jugs of water
just like the one I’ve heaved,
with difficulty, onto the counter.
He solemnly nods and blesses
the water with his scanner.
Also thanks for giving me this song.
Spider silk makes a slow-spinning mobile
of a single pine needle that dangles
from the deck railing.
Cranesbill geraniums nuzzle
the lower branches of a tall spiraea
boasting profusions of fuchsia.
Rabbit, too young to fear open air,
wears a Drishti gaze.
Invisible squirrels chuck, chuck, chuck,
complaining, perhaps, that my presence
disrupts their romp on the lawn.
I’m already absorbed in all that’s going on
when coyote lopes out of the woods—
which of us more startled?
A mottled youth, she veers back under trees
and weaves ghost-like through dappled shade.
Has she passed too quickly to care to catch
yonder napping chipmunk curled beneath a leaf?
Yellow moth rises from a cloud of buttery lobelia,
zigzags up, then down to disappear,
disguised as blossom. Ants meander in.
Red-tailed hawk swoops, a deus ex machina.
I sit still, trying to learn my lines.