Saturday wakes to the scent
of burnt toast wafting through
rattling Venetian-blind palms as
the gonging mission bell cuts
my sleep-hazed mind, and
I cross Mercy Street watching
blacktop roses bowing to the
gentle breeze. I walk with
lopsided longing toward the kazoo
hum of the Farmerās Market,
where a blind troubadour sporting
tattoos on her arms courts
seekers and idlers with her
church-bell voice, and a
farmer hawks Yukon gold potatoes
as if they were truly
treasure. Beyond these nuggets, past
the fruit waiting patiently as
people nibble nuts, savor honey,
bargain with vendors, the spicy
orange day beckons to me.
