Bones
by Jericho Hockett
Bones
of bovine clatter gathered
in our dresses we crowed proudly
over strange desert treasures
curved ribs water colored
into pirate swords from oceanic
worlds & our trophy haul a sun-bleached
canvas bull's skull for a still life
blessing to hang on a wall
we parsed and lay each claim
to some remainder of the remains
after finding the best to be sold
lemonade stand-style at the side of the road
but cars barely slowed as we waved
swords For your children our cardboard
billboard said & by sunset
we still had all our bones laying down
in our beds in my hand
I still feel coarse splinters
of the land I thought bones
would be more like teeth You should not
play with these in the house the adults
did not understand those old bones’
muted glory holy relics
of the ranch I grew up
& know now those bones weren't
worth dirt but in my child eyes
those old cow bones held mysteries
still had a spark of life & I know
one day my bones too will be forgotten
flake when I'm dead I’m no saint
no relics these I'll take
all my bones again to bed
Jericho Hockett's roots are in the farm in Kansas, and she blooms in Topeka with Eddy and Evelynn. She is a poet, social psychologist, teacher, forever student, and dreamer, most whole in the green. Some of her poems appear in Snakeroot: A Midwest Resistance ‘Zine, Pussy Magic Heals, and South Broadway Ghost Society. More works are always brewing.