Drought Season
Sand-gray desert siren, a roadrunner
froze between creosote, confused
not by prickly pear or pencil cactus,
but by fumes choking the road’s throat.
A toddler nearby tensed at each
tire’s shriek, his hand crushed inside
his mother’s as the roadrunner
swiveled its head as if looking for his
before darting west, then north,
then west again, this time
toward a canyon whose creek,
after a meagre snowmelt,
was ringed by thin reeds, skeeters
careening between them. Don’t,
my mother had warned when I crawled
from beneath mesquite,
lizard’s tail dangling from my fist.
When she tried to stop
bulldozers from collapsing bighorn
habitat, I ignored her, grabbing
whiptails, dung beetles, centipedes.
Now the toddler,
eyeing flecks of fool’s gold glowing
in a chunk of sandstone
slips free of his mother’s hand
to flop in the dirt beside the highway.
Can he feel dunes breathing
beneath his feet, aquifer dwindling
but still rich as his own blood running?—
Or does he hear only the groans
of a desert emptying, ravens massed
in the valley to scavenge.
Copyright © 2026 by W. J. Herbert. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on May 3, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.