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    Half-Hazard

    Page 3
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      Despite your puffed cheeks, playful gallop,

      the lovable way you corral your young, I must keep

      my distance. No, I cannot (cannot!) give you what you want.

      Yesterday

      looking for snails,

      five students died

      when their canoes overturned.

      The soft-bodied snails

      went untouched—never breaking

      their hold on the rocks.

      How much can a reservoir

      hold in the dark? Ask

      the moon who was not out

      washing their bodies with light.

      One student survived,

      and he might grow up

      to be a scientist with tremendous drive—

      feel a need to get a move on

      and figure out his atoms,

      how they fly, how they stay

      peaceably intact. The paper said

      with all of their gear

      they sank like rocks. Except

      for the survivor who had been

      asleep on his pack. The parents

      are blaming themselves,

      but they still want answers.

      Yesterday, a mother broke

      a stone on a stone

      to see its center, and found

      an ordinary middle.

      When Fate Is Looking for You

      A girl I knew in college was eaten

      by a lion in Africa. Which could happen to you,

      right as your life is happening. Its teeth

      could have met the pink of your own spine, the one

      your mother has slapped into good posture since

      kindergarten, the spine still humming electric

      with optimism and possibilities. It’s your brain

      that the spine heads to, a brain that may remember

      the television late at night running static

      on an empty channel. Everyone is in bed, the television

      didn’t get turned off, and you, conductor of voltage

      out of the carpet fibers, touch it and are shocked.

      Feel the buzz running down your spine as you

      flip to the station showing animals eating their prey.

      Sometimes, just one wildebeest goes down while

      the entire pack thunders out of the camera’s view.

      Colleen wasn’t looking for this kind of ending.

      When it pounced, she could have been reminiscing

      about her early days in Alhambra, the weight of her

      blue school uniform gone for good. Or maybe she was

      stringing nets into a wide stream all wrong—thinking—

      I don’t have the hands for this, but I will try it again.

      And the lion might have just been looking

      to scare things, this might not have been deliberate.

      Never approach a church at a moment like this

      and expect those gathered to be ready to sing.

      Having It?

      The story likes to end with a body.

      He cuts her open, takes the knife

      to the bone, but finds her

      to be just like any other goose.

      I like to think she made the golden eggs

      to bridge their lives. Why not admit

      that we all do extraordinary things

      for money and love?

      Today the goose is made of steel.

      She isn’t that rare. And we’ve quit

      trying to dismantle her magic body; rather,

      we’re trying to predict when the next egg

      will fall. Sometimes people kill for it.

      That’s how want works. Sometimes the goose

      is disguised, sometimes a sign is posted

      letting everyone know that the driver or cashier

      is carrying a goose holding less than

      twenty dollars. Luckily, for everyone, the real goose

      is dead and imaginary, or the greedy among us

      would be invading every farm, sorting through

      even the clucking hens, turning their beds

      over, tossing them around by

      their feet. We’d be feeling inside them

      with an oily glove, wanting the eggs

      to be our miracle, certain their existence

      had nothing to do with love.

      Contemplating Light

      Tonight the moon is perfect. She beams on every West Coast city—whole—entirely the moon. Jane Austen is lining somebody’s shelf, and it is likely that a silverfish has slipped into a binding again, to thrive on the starch. And even though the silverfish is the exact shape of a crescent moon, we should not blame the moon. She may dissolve. Astronauts have tried to break the moon, have kicked her under their hard boots, have drilled tokens out of her, have plunged a flagpole in her side. I know I am not the moon. Her light bounces off of my lit TV. She is giving me something. A way to follow the bleached stones home. My canary in her cage is under a dark cloth. It is night and she cannot take the moon. It makes her stir. It makes her cry and toss seeds and husks from her cage onto the floor. Her hard beak glistens, her tongue rolls over. She craves a darker night.

      Breaking

      The cats seemed to understand

      that we didn’t love them—

      barely loved each other—

      and that we wouldn’t be lasting long.

      We caught them from behind,

      put them in our trunk. We weren’t

      cruel. They were placed

      in a cozy box. You

      found a large rock to go

      on top. Everything was safe

      as we rattled to the pound. And are

      these your cats? asked the man

      at the pound. No, they aren’t, I said,

      they were just cats, we were just a couple

      who’d found them. Really,

      they were my grandmother’s farm cats—

      thin, sick, pink-eyed. She’d grown tired

      of pouring them milk. And if no one

      claims them, let me leave my name,

      I said. (I didn’t want them but

      I’d take them.) Good of you to have brought

      them in, said the man, but these cats

      were doomed—respiratory infections.

      We drove—days numbered—to a hotel

      out of town. Upstairs, we walked in,

      the television already running. What about

      the rock? you asked. I have it,

      right? And I thought about the rock—

      a small moon resting in the trunk’s

      blue carpet nest. All you could think about

      was opening our window and dropping it

      down four floors, aiming it into

      a man-made lake. You pressed. I said no.

      But you got the rock anyway. Out it went.

      I turned the channel, hyenas laughing

      over their fresh kill. You said it would

      be fun. It landed on the pavement,

      missed the lake completely

      and split in two. You shut the window

      and kissed my neck. This is what

      I know about my body, it turns

      to be loved at every instance, it feels

      warmth and it wants and it wants.

      About Myself

      I am always sad and my garbage

      is always stinking, on a curb

      not so far away. Let me start again.

      I wear my sadness like a coat

      and the coat never comes off.

      Its wooden buttons are fastened to me.

      My mother made it. My father handed her

      the idea. My pockets are empty

      and it has always been too long.

      I used to carry a hankie and a tiny mouse.

      But my pocket grew a hole. No, the mouse

      is not responsible. I felt all of its well-mannered paws

      and they felt me. It had one tooth that kept snapping

      loose. And when I approached a man

      the mouse
    would wink its left eye. And when I prayed to God

      the mouse would crawl to my pocket’s velvet edge.

      I woke up one day, the sky was blue,

      and it and my hankie were gone.

      I thought about giving my sadness a bath.

      But why remind this heavy self

      of how it is nothing like the tiny mouse

      riding a feather out of town.

      If, with my two giant feet, I could have tunneled

      alongside that mouse, it would have led me

      to a new world where mice die

      at the drop of a hat and everyone knows this

      and, therefore, exists bareheaded out of love.

      Assignment: Write a Poem about an Animal

      No, I told John. You may not write a poem about

      your will. If not my will, he said, how about my soul?

      I said no. He wrote about a male impala dominating

      his female herd. Oh, I knew I could never trust him.

      The antelope was not simply an antelope; its eyes,

      of course, were the same gray as John’s, had the same

      number of violet flecks. And unlike most impalas

      this one wasn’t leaping through Africa; rather, it was living

      on the outskirts of a park in John’s hometown.

      Twenty-five and still shooting bb’s into songbirds and

      digging through their bodies to get his bb’s back,

      bragging about the women he’s conquered and the adventurous

      ways he took them. He wrote the poems

      I didn’t want to read. In his last, he gathered images

      from LA streets, described the La Brea tar pits

      off of Wilshire Boulevard, the curve of the mastodon’s neck,

      his already-sunken hind legs and tail. John wasn’t sure

      how so many got trapped. He wondered what kind of urge

      led them into this bubbling mess. In conclusion, he used

      himself to understand. Twice, rushing to buy condoms

      and cigarettes, he ran across a parking lot and stepped

      into puddles of oil and water, ruining his tidy socks.

      They were mostly young males, he wrote, I guess

      it happens. Which, in the end, reminded me of my own soul—

      bright and impulsive with an important date to keep,

      she too could overlook the dark and liquid road.

      Happy Endings

      I like the story where the cowboy lives

      because the bullet struck the whiskey flask

      instead of his thin-walled heart. Or the one

      where the boy is thrown from the wrecked car

      and lands perfectly on a pillow of grass

      instead of the awful road. I’m to the point

      where if someone has to get killed, please

      deliver a clear lesson along with that death.

      No random, Godless acts. No mad dogs, no

      hatchets being wielded at good girls slumbering

      in the folds of their warm beds. After reading Cinderella,

      after observing the fat and happy cartoon mouse

      weekly escaping the ravenous cat, after watching

      my fellow earthlings pull together and pound

      the Martians into the rock-hard desert using sarcasm

      and sticks, I’ve come to appreciate the happy ending,

      no matter how tacky or unearned. It’s today. And death tolls

      continue to climb. You think I want the truth?

      Teton Road

      Bear on your path. Wolf at your thigh. Cougar

      leaping from a low branch onto your back. Your back?

      How can this happen? On a Wednesday? Daisies pop open.

      Good Samaritans merrily travel to donate blood.

      But here they are, beasts gaming against us,

      growing suburban in the mountain valley. So much

      like my neighbors—hungry, apathetic, bored. A child

      was bit on the wrist by a prairie rattler

      in one of the Dakotas and now she’s dead. All of her.

      Poof. Even though the cock crowed in the morning,

      stirring the farm and assuring everything within earshot

      that the same familiar circle had been started anew.

      Even the penned hogs believed this. I can barely eat.

      Gnat on my heart. Mice in the pantry. I won’t snap

      the strawberries from their happy vines. Bargain:

      How about I never destroy anything? Solution: I’ll stay

      always in this chair. Now from stage right enters

      a conversation with myself. ME: You can’t do it.

      ME: I can. ME: Cats starve. Clams are sealed

      so tightly rarely do they love another clam.

      But you—you’ve got promise. ME: And my chair.

      ME: On the other elbow of this country,

      a meadow shivers, and a fox has been outfoxed,

      its leg in a trap. ME: But if I leave the mountains,

      I can’t imagine my life. ME: I have given you

      all these chances. Take them.

      III

      Half-Hazard

      They can put a girl on the moon right now, I suppose.

      The details wouldn’t be too hard to crack.

      Dangers here. Perils there. It’ll go how it goes.

      Earth faces venoms, disease, foes and woes.

      Free of that jeopardy, she won’t rocket back.

      If you put the right girl on the moon, I suppose.

      Some might worry alone she’ll face lunar lows.

      Does a girl who lacks parties turn blue in pitch black?

      Dangers here. Perils there. It’ll go how it goes.

      Like Buzz, Neil, and other above-average joes,

      she’ll travel in space boots and wield a screw jack,

      if we put our best girl on the moon, I suppose.

      We’ll blast her above every bloom of dog rose.

      Let her farewell our bright spots along with our wrack.

      Dangers here. Perils there. Who will own how this goes?

      Prepared for the darkness and cut off from schmoes—

      whole girl, half-hazard. On a zodiac track,

      we’ll put that girl right on the moon, I suppose.

      Endangered. Imperiled. And watch how it goes.

      Gardening on Alcatraz in July

      Cutthroat plants overtaking other plants. It was new to me.

      The needs of the calla lily. The habits of the rose.

      There is one artichoke growing on the island. How it

      arrived in Officer’s Row nobody knows. The prison

      shut down and the plants grew wild, persisted for decades.

      Concerning the gardens, I know the long story

      and the short one. The veteran gardeners have arms

      marked with scars from tearing out the monstrous

      blackberry and rose bushes that overran everything.

      Volunteers pulled for months to uncover the survivors.

      Most famously, the Bardou Job rose, thought to be extinct,

      is alive again, back in the world, shocking rosarians.

      Now tourists trickle down the windy side of the island

      on the west road passing the cell house and a steep slope

      of drosanthemum lit up in pink. Tended by robbers and

      counterfeiters, fed by bathwater, restored from photos

      these flowers are back. On Sundays, I lead this garden tour

      from the dock to the summit, again and again, month

      after month—Machine Gun Kelly on their minds—I show them—

      tell them—really want them to notice—foxglove, aster, fuchsia,

      sweet pea, sage—all rupturing in their persistent blooms. Because

      we should all bear witness to what we didn’t expect to see.

      What We Did before Our Apocalypse

      We stockpiled all the bottled water we could find. We argued

      over Christmas tre
    es until all the good ones were gone.

      We drove less. We starved ourselves of carbs. We buried

      Muhammad Ali in Kentucky. We ran on charisma.

      We took the batteries out of the smoke detectors so all the toys

      would work. We jiggled the toilet handle to try to fix the problem.

      We let people who were acting like assholes merge into

      the carpool lane. Orgied out, we debated canceling HBO.

      We packed our suitcases without hairspray and barely

      any liquids at all. We reversed our vasectomies.

      We fled to the mall and bought shoes. We battled the goddamn

      kitchen ants again and their relentless thirst for grease.

      We watched Carrie Fisher’s heart stop on a plane. We fretted

      like bigots over bathrooms in one of the Carolinas.

      We cherished Alec Baldwin and reported every rogue backpack

      to the authorities. Underneath the table at Buca di Beppo

      we all held hands and prayed. We watched an old man insult

      nearly everybody and then let him fondle the nukes.

      State Lines

      Geese fly and refuse to honor them.

      White-tailed deer graze unequally

      on both sides of the boundary. But I’ve

      had to decide, time after time, and declare

      a street address, a spot I am now stitched to

      by my never-ending mail. I owe so much.

      Envelope after envelope, a steady flow.

      I understand why some delinquents blow

     


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