muscle bunched, a boulder
of power bulging beneath sunhot skin.
Horse sees
the world nearly 360 degrees
through the largest eyes of any land mammal,
holds the history of love
and wounds
in her wide sight,
piercing our cerebral fear.
At full gallop, horse breathes shallow, the only
being who can run beyond oxygen,
miles before dropping of a burst heart.
Horse completes any landscape, tossing
beauty to the sky, mane and lush tail
tangling wild as she four steps
a waltz around her rearing mate.
Give me the huff of a thoroughbred, black
legs pumping through loose sod, hackles
collapsing the far track’s curve, ears
tucked back to her own lunging heartbeat,
dawn fog,
smelling of clover and sawdust, the steady chuff
of thunder hooves thudding into earth’s flesh
the sexual joy of speed, flexed shoulders
and thighs gleaming sweat, sweat,
sweat to please
the slight-boned rider clamped to her back.
Or a mustang galloping over lupine to a sandstone ridge
where he bucks, kicks thin air,
jerks his head clear of biting flies, the echo
of his stampede beating bedrock and dust
and dust lodging in his heaving lungs,
unsaddled by his lust.
He leads
his harem along cliff’s edge, past
a cougar den to sweet grass lining a creek.
Alone in high country after my sister died,
no longer able to breathe,
I stood at an unraveling barbwire fence
and watched a herd of quarter horses race straight at me,
eight horses outweighing me by thousands of pounds.
I did not leap away or scream. Go ahead,
I said,
Go ahead.
Their hooves, that could easily have split my ribcage
and skull, came to a stop inches away.
The mares stretched their necks
and sniffed me with nostrils soft as Chinese silk.
Feeding them grass, I scratched
the long bones of their faces
leaning into my jaw, my unbroken teeth.
Even the yearlings were careful not to bruise
my sandaled feet. Their unbearable
gentle muzzles broke
through the ulcerated curtain of long grief.
We’d known each other all our years.
Shooing flies from their eyes, I whispered
prayers in ears flicking against my cheeks
knew then gratitude with no expectation, love
pungent as rain
rivering gigantic flanks
that turned and sauntered into dusk dissolving the trees.