I found him dozing in the dust of the dry top-paddock dam. Coiled olive and yellow stripes, lazy in the afternoon sun. I saw the blunt wedge of his head stir to rise, body flattening like yesterday’s hay. I stomped. Stomped again, crushed head into hardpan, and heard the moan of life departing. Or just wind through the empty grain silo.
My friend Billy is sitting before a blank page, by the dim light of his study lamp. Billy the writer. My guess is that he’s thinking more about the red splash of sunset outside his window than the white page, wondering how to capture a blood-soaked sky in fresh words. Billy ponders a single word for days, hangs success or failure on the choice. The torment of writers, he once told me, is that all the best songs have been sung. In a different office, a doctor reviews the day’s scans. I imagine Billy finding a perfect sunset metaphor as a frantic doctor punches numbers on his phone. Blood races veined highways faster than sound flies through air. Billy’s crimson sky clots to grey before his phone even sounds.