On the first Tuesday of the month
they test the tornado siren in a town a thousand miles away
from everyone I love
the cat cowers in the darkest corner
of the closet my mom calls
unrelated events
but I woke up all those miles between us
at exactly the moment
of impact
Five living kids got into a car
three came out.
Somewhere between here and the place I used to call home the landscape flattens
even the mountains look like hills when compared
their surfaces a topography of loss in the absence
of glaciers—scars.
Our sister slits the insides of her thighs
one for every day that her friends
are still dead
and our brother loses ten pounds
sick with grief a cyst protrudes
from his pancreas is painful to touch
and afraid the doctor will say cancer again
he refuses every appointment
I’m telling myself there is nothing
my being there can solve crying in the shower
The cat on the tub edge cries too pokes at my foot
recognizes drowning
This is what I wanted isn’t it?
This chance to see myself as something other than the eldest
daughter, taught to solve.
Yet here I am with nothing to do
but grieve
the ground opens
as sinkholes
gasping mouths
our collective
mourning.
Red
The last clutch of holly berries
on a bush plucked bare. Two male
cardinals. A Christmas bow caught
in the underbrush. The man’s face
while he yells at me
for having asked too many questions,
for having required his humanity.
The barn, six horses strung
between it and an apple tree, now bare.
The skin of my chest against each octave
of his raised voice. My father,
in every memory. The oxidized dirt
of a fresh grave. Blood. A warning.
Scattered nylon petals. The Stop
sign. The body when reduced to this.