NELLE 5 | 2022
And God said to Cain, “Cursed are you from the ground that opened its mouth to take you brother’s blood from your hand.”
—Genesis 4:10-11
Dear wandering dust, dear vagrant clay,
 dear humans made of me,
how quickly you’ve forgotten.
 I am not just a backdrop
 for your horrors—
read your holy book: Stars and trees
 join in battle, hills mourn, valleys
 and waves tremble and writhe
at the approach of God. And how
 many of your slaughtered
 have I choked down? I’ve borne
witness to the forests
 you’ve razed, evicting owls, salamanders,
 wolves; building your houses
in hills just waiting
 to be wildfires. I am trying
 to warn you. For every season,
I send wrong weather, drain
 reefs of their color, let whole species
 go extinct. Yet you go on.
Enough. Too much. You are no longer
 the protagonist of this story.
 So try this other one:
Seeing something he wanted
 across the road, a boy dropped
 his mother’s hand
and ran into the onslaught
 of traffic. She screamed
 his name, rooted there, unable
to look away. At the clamor
 and rush, at a mirror hissing
 so close past his ear it raised
the small hairs inside it,
 he ran back to her. Weeping,
 she slapped him hard; weeping,
he pressed the heat of his cheek
 to her chest. That slap? Pain
 now to stave off worse later.
I am so tired
 of being afraid
 for you.


