Mexican Canyon Trestel
The old rail-bed climbs, twisting through the trees.
Douglas Firs and Ponderosa Pines chat
With the Aspens and Oaks in shorter groves
As the wind blows. Their intermittent shade
Pools in blue cooling spots where we pause, rest
Luxuriating in the breeze that climbs
Out of the Tularossa basin to
Carry away the sweat of our effort,
As we slake our thirst from crackling plastic.
“It’s just around the bend,” I say, “Perhaps.”
“I’m glad we came,” you reply, “Look at that.”
And so I do, loving the way the wind
Lifts your silvery gray hair framing your
Face in gentle waves that you brush away.
Thirst abated we move on from one view
To the next with me wondering, will the
Thunder catch us in the open again,
Laughing as we dodge the fat pregnant drops,
Their day trip from the valley completed.
Perhaps the tall Ponderosas will catch
Trailing skirts of the cloud just long enough.
Then we see it, a gray, graceful curve thrown
Out across the canyon by engineers
And laborers, a marriage of thought, sweat
And pine spanning a dark problematic
Place with an elegant exercise in
Geometry. A gentle hand finds mine
The view is great I’m glad we came this way.