It is Sunday night in our little
mesquite bosque. I grab a Key lime soda from the fridge and find a chair on the
porch next to Megan. We can hear the highway up the hill behind the house, but
the light of the setting sun and the breeze off the mountains – a breeze still
carrying the chill of last night’s snow – honeys the light, quiets the drone of traffic.
No gauzy film, billboard, corporate-sponsored
dreamscape, or media hype could capture this subtle shift of the season, this
last, cool, goodbye kiss of springtime that spills over and through us as we
sip drinks and make small talk.
The last of the snow runoff is
withdrawing back to the high country. Clear water still runs over the sand at
the foot of the mountains, but has disappeared just today here in the valley. I
followed it upstream as the mouth of our winter creek retreated, growing
silent, its piece said, overtaken by the thirsty sand.
Shadows lengthen. Trees have gone
opaque with blossom and leaf in this last week. I watch my wife read, study her
crossed legs, and wonder how many times I will see her again in a light like
this, a breeze like this, my shoes wet with the last drops of a vanishing
desert river. Once more? Twice? Not more than a few, if any.
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