Responsibility

(for Clyde Fixmer)

At the lower fence line under the stars

he hears what at first he takes

to be the neighbor’s mare,

come to investigate his apple pocket,

but then gets that neck-chill

and knows otherwise and turns

to see by starlight alone a dust devil

spitting along perpendicular to the wire

and straight at him. He’s seen thousands

of the things but never crossed paths

with one on foot, and watches

as long as he can before the grit

of its coming edge gets in his eyes.

Then up his pants legs and sleeves

the dust of it spins. His shirt wants to open

over his spine, his cap levitates

and vanishes, the fence buzzes

and rattles, its staples scraping, its posts

making a knuckle crack clatter—

and then it’s past, back and forthing

over the pasture toward the hulk

of the old stable, from the roof of which

it removes three or four thin flimsy shakes

and causes the aged gelding BJ

to flinch and whirl and trot out into the open

and glare, with stars in his eyes,

at the man who is responsible

for everything that happens.