Their two-ton Jimmy staggers now,
rolls and wobbles on creaky springs,
creeping over berms on a rutted
two-track with a house of
hay on its back, is inched back
through a doorway just big enough
to let her in, driver climbing out
and crawling under her flatbed
to enter the hell that is this barn,
a hundred-and-twenty-degree
corrugated-tin oven, air
a vortex of flying debris—
dust, grass, weed, vaporized wood
and dung. To live you must learn
to pivot the weight, to be one
with it: the downswing a free-
fall followed in rhythm by a push
on the upthrust. And thus
it’s a thing that can be done,
ninety-pound bales heaved,
chucked into mow, stacked
side-down so as not to burn
(hauler’s sacred lore), the last
pair in a row “married” in an al-
most too-tight hole. Daylight
growing incrementally around
the load’s unstacked edges.
Then, puffs of fresh air—thank
you lord—ice-water slugs,
a dip/smoke/chaw, the swipe
of a bandana across the face.
And then, son, back to square one.