Liam Leslie
To My Little Sister,
Who Asks About Running
Liam Leslie
To My Little Sister, Who Asks About Running
If you loop
the strings tight over foot
and step firm
through the thick
fog emerging
from your own shallow
find there’s room
that dawn lit
such soft corners
aching for you
to hide, to trace
each feathered tip
of the dew-kissed
wheatgrass
as daybreak invites
you, once more: breathe
the cold air
warm again
set the pace
toward another
horizon lifting
brilliant tremors,
tangled rays,
the old
sweet soil,
the same
today I hold
wondering how
stones we kicked
too far to see
settled into
themselves
their new ecologies
bound together
by clay, red-heavy
and spanning
past spring, and
crumbling,
the country road
straight-backed by wire-
parted fences,
I know
slowly, weakly
we burn
our faces pinker
each morning
but sister, steady
the shaky engine
we’ll tend
the memory fields
back home, forever
you’ll ask when
and already you can’t
Liam Leslie is a writer, educator, and archival researcher originally from Wyoming. He is currently a Graduate Steinbeck Fellow at San Jose State University, where he is pursuing an MFA in Creative Writing. His writing has been featured by the American Heritage Center, Fourteen Hills, Novus Literary Arts, and more.
Featured in:
Red Rock Review
Issue 56



