he steps outside. Something growls as if warning him away
but that’s all it is; no imminent attack.
There may, or may not, be a storm. Probably not,
he thinks, but the air’s hot, dense, a touch fanatical,
and its burgeoning fever needs to break soon.
Still high summer, but the trees believe it’s autumn,
sacrificial leaves falling to crisp brown drifts in the dust.
Their world sags, kneels for pardon, reprieve. Or the axe.
Endurance is the only virtue left. Where are those frogs
that bake themselves for years in Kalahari sand,
dreaming of that sacred kiss of rain, of resurrection
when all the sleeping beauties awaken? He is no prince
but knows it will happen, it must come. Just hold on.
Just hold on.