The Wooden Trap
The held cry of a hawk makes Thomas Hardy think to make her believe it's a newborn's cry she hears. Milk wets through her blouse. The other women know at once. That's chapter one. How it starts to grow while above his head the cumuli accumulate. The August fields waver beyond the privet hedge. He's given up the novel for poetry. The women look at each other. One counts out change on a plank counter. That's that she says. Then exposition's drift to flashback: How a horseshoe loosens; how when leading the horse the master returns. Not angry, only to get it done right. How she presses under the eaves of the shed with him while the afternoon rain comes down so hard they are nearly soaked anyway. The editorial omniscient bites his tongue. Innocent as it goes. The scent of windfall rises up through the apple tree from the ground. Some of the leaves bronze even now. There's no turning back but that's getting ahead of ourselves. There's Hardy. Shoes a disgrace. Canvas gaiters undone and one foot on top of the ladder where it narrows at the highest rung, the worn wood twice the width of a stirrup, and one foot in the crotch of a limb. He has it all worked out. She's in another country where rumor's made a place for her. Where's the little one? they ask, but she presses past them into the lane, It serves her right but no one says it so that she hears. A limb tumbles through the green cloud of foliage. And then another. He cuts it back to make it bear, though a neighbor's stopped to tell him it's ill-advised so late in the season. She finds a place for herself as a domestic until the governor says a girl's come back. They'll have to let her go. It's dusk. The clouds go pink to shell. He folds the little saw. The ladder widens to its base, A trick of perspective also that lures the gopher into the wooden box he's set in its tunnel, the hole which looks like an exit, the end of the tunnel, daylight, but smaller than its head and those footsteps on the earth above, which pause and anticipate her every turn, and block her escape with a garden fork plunged into the lyric dark.
From Something Black in the Green Part of Your Eye by Kevin Cantwell. Copyright © 2002 by Kevin Cantwell. Reprinted by permission of New Issues Press. All rights reserved.