LATE NIGHT WITH FOG AND HORSES

They were in the living room. Saying their

goodbyes. Loss ringing in their ears.

They’d been through a lot together, but now

they couldn’t go another step. Besides, for him

there was someone else. Tears were falling

when a horse stepped out of the fog

into the front yard. Then another, and

another. She went outside and said,

“Where did you come from, you sweet horses?”

and moved in amongst them, weeping,

touching their flanks. The horses began

to graze in the front yard.

He made two calls: one call went straight

to the sheriff—“someone’s horses are out.”

But there was that other call, too.

Then he joined his wife in the front

yard, where they talked and murmured

to the horses together. (Whatever was

happening now was happening in another time.)

Horses cropped the grass in the yard

that night. A red emergency light

flashed as a sedan crept in out of fog.

Voices carried out of the fog.

At the end of that long night,

when they finally put their arms around

each other, their embrace was full of

passion and memory. Each recalled

the other’s youth. Now something had ended,

something else rushing in to take its place.

Came the moment of leave-taking itself.

“Goodbye, go on,” she said.

And the pulling away.

Much later,

he remembered making a disastrous phone call.

One that had hung on and hung on,

a malediction. It’s boiled down

to that. The rest of his life.

Malediction.