of her body, black brushstrokes scumbled with branchlight
and dust. You stare at her wild predicament.
No sound, but the hush of her quiets the neighborhood.
Fear and amazement crouch at the back of your throat.
You picture her a late night, roving appetite: haystack body,
stout ramp of neck, her slanting snout, slippered feet–
crossing yards and sidewalks, blacktopped streets,
dumpster diving after dark, silhouette like purling water
or a shadow sylph from the dark side of flower moon.
You watch two uniforms mount the floating platform
of the hook and ladder truck. A knot of unknowing twists
your gut when gloved hands pull the jabstick’s
tranquilizer from the velvet slope of black bear’s shoulder.
Time tumbles back. Years ago, Mom said No more animals.
Home alone, you heard the rumble of a truck outside, footsteps
banging up the 3rd floor stairs, a man in SPCA uniform, strange
hands reaching for your cat, hauled her out the door, your face
pasted to the window pane. You fought to keep your rattling heart
from clawing out your rib cage. You watch the bear hug tight the tree,
wish that you could love the way the maple loves, hold wild bewilderment
in your arms all day, like a fallen angel or morning prayer.
See the purses of black bear’s eyes unsnap, head sways, mouth
unhinges like the busted bucket of a stranded backhoe. You
look away. Pink muscle of her ropey, petal tongue dangles loose.
When a bear’s lost in town, I worry more about the bear than people,
you hear a woman standing next to you say. Catchers fluff the orange
rescue net. Two stories up, in cordoned air, strange man grabs and yanks.
Wonder how it feels to catch a falling constellation
in your hands. Not like moon, or song, or falling star—
black bear drops, ponderous as churchyard’s chiseled stone.
Hear haunt of wild animal hunger claw deep inside,
the way longing forever drifts you to an empty maple tree,
net of branches weaving shadows, hauls your breath away.