|
This year there are no berries, only poison stems, like wrists flung around the oaks. Flocks of grackles still arrive, milling like dark suitors on the grass.
Inside, my cat looks on. Last week he prowled and rubbed his paws along the poison buds:
holding him caused blisters on my lips and arms. Wherever he brushed August wrote its name in streaks of red. Once in the bath he cried and clawed. Scratches
crosshatched over wheals. Later, a shot of cortisone spreading in my hip, I grabbed a sprayer, aimed the venom of an herbicide into the trees.
I'm cautious now. On button-down summer nights shrunken leaves caress the oaks, poison vines still shimmer. The cat goes on a prowl.
I plump his blanket, knowing he'll return, that the ivy will creep along smooth bark, unbinding luscious berries beneath untruthful blooms all across my lawn.
David Cazden is the poetry editor of Miller's Pond. His poetry has appeared in various publications, including Stirring, Samsara, Poet's Canvas, Rattle, Porcupine, and Byline Magazine. His photography is forthcoming in Main Street Rag and Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review.
|
|