Black bird, red wing
So this is where the last year of the Mayan calendar begins— 5,000 birds falling on Beebe, Arkansas, a state that could smooth out with the sway of the plains but instead sputters the silence of the first syllable like a pothole that hits before you're off the on ramp—say it— ar- -can-saw— ending with that blade of rusted teeth to chew through the last of what's left of those woods, a fast-driving diesel flatbed of felled trees and all of us in a tight spot between that chugging machine and the concrete barrier as we hope the straight back of our consonants will hold, even if they are quiescent monsters, reticent prayers, because we can't help it, we lean towards letters that do not bend, try our exhausted weight on the middle of that state, that silent K—the shape of a man trying to hold up the ceiling, trying not to think of its falling as the sky's.
Copyright © 2011 by Nickole Brown. Used with permission of the author.