—For Trina and Barb of Animal Haven Farm Sanctuary, Asheville, North Carolina
1.
Reader, meet the two women who sunk
everything they had into taking in broken 
animals—the gimpy and oozing 
critters, the ugly, lopsided, tail-less 
pets, urine-soaked and drooling, zested 
with fleas, the matted and discarded 
scrapheaps left growling and bucking, pissing
on everything, the good-riddance left roped 
to a chain-link fence. 
No, I take that back.
Instead I want you to be
those two: I want you crazy 
enough to try to fix those beasts—
to feed and brush and bathe and dip and 
sweetmilk them whole; I want you to try,
to always try, despite the odds,
just as you coaxed the docile
fat-blind pig up on legs that eventually 
broke from his own inbred
weight, just as you spritzed the mites
off a mangy hen that would be limp
in the claws of a hawk 
later that same day. On the hill, a stubborn
but sometimes gentle sheep grows 
cold under a blue tarp,
and in your truck is a towel across 
the backseat for your favorite
but neurotic-as-hell dog, how you rushed her
to the vet only to see her
put down. 
2.
No, let me make this real—
Reader, I want you tired, every joint
in your body stiff and worn.
I want you to finally strip off 
your filthy clothes. Then, I want you jolted 
from sleep by a cry that in your dreams 
sounds like an infant wailing 
and, now awake,
sounds just the damn same.
3.
Go. Find that kid goat 
bleating in the grainy dark. 
He’s no bigger than a lap dog, 
and on his fist-sized head are the buds 
of his horns—tiny, like 
two popcorn pieces of warm bone—
two bright spots, the only thing
you can see. 
Flip on the switch. 
Now, you know.
With bare hands I want you to 
clear the froth from his lolling 
tongue. I want you to grab a rag,
a sponge, the corner of your shirt—
anything you can find—to sop 
up the liquid—so much of it
you can’t tell what’s what—be it 
mucus or bile or vomit or blood—
as if every water has been brought up 
for this giving-in, as if his body
is already a river and rushing
away. Now, use your arms:
it takes strength to steady the 
convulsing of a thing even this young, 
and then, once his gaze rolls back to 
white, you know what to do, you know
your job: push together the furred slits 
of his lids, close the extinguished 
horizons of his eyes. 
4.
Don’t play stupid. You knew 
this was coming. You’ve seen it 
enough times. You’re not dumb, 
just desperate to try
to save this little meat 
goat the farmer dumped 
at your door, 
too septic and riddled 
with worms
to even be killed
to eat.
5.
Now, get on your knees. 
Mop it up. As you wring 
out the rags don’t push away 
what you know of the sun,
let yourself admit the light,
how it made his ears pink and transparent
revealed the secret veins of leaves,
how you adored it when they periscoped
to your voice and he looked up to
give you the small meditations 
of fresh milk and hay in his mouth. 
Go on. Get sentimental
if you have to—have a good cry—
no one is here, and besides,
who would care? Because you try, 
don’t you? You always try.
But always, that impossible 
riddle, always the word 
riddled with the word 
worms, as if each whip-like body was curled 
into a question, a wriggling puzzle, a mob 
infestation of questions—parasites that love 
a home so hard they turned that kid goat
anemic, fevering, stuttering with a murmuring 
heart, shitting out a writhing
pile of larvae and eggs. Little sips—
little hooks—little burrows—this was how, 
little by little, that little goat finally 
collapsed, arched his throat back 
as if to be slit, jerked his legs up into the
nothing like the fetus he was 
just two months before. 
6.
But here is the point: Do not ever 
let yourself think it didn’t matter. 
It mattered then 
as it matters now, because until 
this morning rose dull on the horizon
with this useless, good-for-nothing 
goat now dead on your floor, 
regardless, in spite of, no matter, 
you fed a beast worthless, a real
lost cause not unlike
this whole stubborn,
beautiful, fucked-up planet 
about to seize and drown 
in its own melt. 
7.
There really wasn’t a thing you could
do, but admit it: if you knew, 
if you really could say he would not have died 
last night but would certainly die 
tomorrow, you’d force yourself 
out of bed and do what it is you do:
you’d count his pills, warm his formula 
over the stove, rake out his soiled pen, 
and with arms wide, you’d bring him 
a fresh bale of hay. Yes, that’s right: now say
his silly goat name—because, yes, every living 
thing deserves a name—and you called him
Peanut, a playful way to say 
he was a flake of the size he should have been,
so sick he did not jump or play as
he should but leaned his tiny face 
exhausted into your leg. Now, bend 
to stroke his scrawny
goat neck. Say, Good boy, Peanut. 
We’ve got you. Now, now 
there. Everything’s gonna be just fine. 
You know it’s
a lie, but no matter.
Hope, you know by now,
is not a thing you feel 
but something you do, 
and this is your job. It’s what
you do; it’s what needs to be
done. 
From To Those Who Were Our First Gods (Rattle, 2018) by Nickole Brown. Used with permission of the author.
