BPR 48 | 2021
Three-hours-deep in the thick of migration, the bulging
 sky sank to the acres of green, and budding from dirt 
 beneath morning rain the soybeans were churning
 a shallow tide that barreled back to the horizon.
But the highway veered, its wet skin slick, and I pawed
 at my brake like a dreaming dog, a shriek cutting air—
 as if drawn by bow from a weather-slipped string—
 shaking a bone in my ear when the semi struck me
Then when June came surely as a fog rolls away, 
 I watched summer bleed to autumn on the outskirts
 of my yard, while a finch—having broken through a flap 
 in the screen—wove twigs to a nest in my rafters.
She stumbled from her perch into slow, crooked flight 
 until the white-knuckled grip of the world unfurled
 and she dropped from her hold to the floor 
 of my porch, then lay at my feet like a parcel.
Soon I’ll be opening blinds to bare branches 
 while mourning the absence of song at my window 
 and watching the trees—having pulled themselves 
 inward—patiently wait for the light to return, say, 
                    It all happened so fast.



