NATION v.3
Above the forests,
Past the tundra,
Upon cold ice,
We dance in secret there,
And decorate a merry May pole
With many hangmans nooses.
And we sit on front porches in the dim light,
Talking about everything.
The warmth of neon makes our faces and eyes glow.
And just beneath the ice, our brothers and sisters are sleeping,
Dazed and chained,
Unbooted and frozen
Riding wild mustangs,
At the edge of an abyss.
Looking up at the moon,
We start to remember our horses.
"Where is your horse?" somebody thinks to ask,
Her breath visible, swirling in icy wind.
"What horse?" I reply.
I look up from an angel
I made in the snow.
"This horse, silly."
Someone points at thin, cold air.
"My horse is in the barn,"
A teenage girl replies.
"My barn is gone. It burned down,"
An old woman still remembers,
"The horses never come back, never?"
Her warm smile shows the memory causes pain.
A woman cradling something long gone
Screams through tears, "Damn the horses!
"Where is my son?"
But we all quickly forget horses and join others,
Gathering around warm fire in a barrel and singing songs,
Raising barns and drinking cold beer afterwards,
Standing and smiling in silent wonder at our works,
Standing on the ice,
Shivering regretfully,
And dreaming about our lost horses.