Indoctrination

The country road was so narrow, two cars couldn’t pass


Fragrant honeysuckle strong in my nose, irritating pollen in my eyes


Along with sweat, provided by the climb it took to get there


on my bicycle… on this quiet, early Saturday a.m.


My family away, I’m feeling as lonely as the empty fields


That butt-up against the newly-green hillsides


Slow songs come out staggered through heavy breathing


Songs about whiskey and wine and the aftermath


I am passed by an SUV which, once by, slams on its breaks


The passenger-side door flies open – the worry of a rider


In these days of heroin, meth, and the need for a fix


As I slow and prepare to pass to the left


a girl in her late teens, smiling, pops out and runs in front of the vehicle


“Daddy it’s alive. I’m not touching it”


“Just pick it up by the tail and throw it in the weeds”


He says, as I pass his opened window. And I see it


A skinny, four-foot black snake, innocently crossing the road


I laugh from his comment, and he laughs too,


As his daughter bends down and I ride on


I hear her squeal, actually a full-fledged scream


And I again laugh


She saved a friend of the farm and the farmer


I think of my long-departed grandmother, who called one by name


The SUV passes once more


I turn left and begin to climb


On a route that will take me home.


 


© 2018


© 2018

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Published on May 26, 2018 10:08
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