AGAINST ERASURE
Louie gunned down in his shop,
Boris struck and flung to asphalt by the drunk driver,
and now,
David’s body slumps in his car on a parched
Florida highway, his shot clean, the note back home
on a packing crate addressed to his son. I can think of nothing
but family curses,
omens-by-numbers. Our men gone out in a spark
of metal, a black-mottled flash. Erasure
is its own law, respects no one, not even those
who know randomness
only as the lone woodland creature too slow in the road.
Against deletion, our own mitochondria swirl,
unmoored from the layered loam of history.
The northern white cedars
of our great-grandparents’ age guard mountain
foothills in the variegated distance. I marvel
at just how many roots can be rent from you
before your life forgets
to rouse, believe the next day can contain you.
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