SET FREE
My father knew doves
were a clenched fist
under veil.
My mother kept their bodies
like two rings,
the birds quiet.
My favorite song
was skittish. A goodnight
instead of star. The universe
pecked red and my father
set them free.
When I found their wings
like a jaw
a smudge of black sunrise
feathers gone and the thick
stick of blood missing from
their devoted bodies.
HOOKED LACE
I was always in the good car with my mother, the one
unable to be kept at the plant because of knives
in tires and cigarettes left lit on paint.
She hated the Z-28. She wanted four doors, not two
after a hard rain she hit every puddle and pothole.
Each splash, pasted and caked, left to dry
overnight like a sin. My mother collected Queen
Anne’s Lace, tall crowns masquerading as weeds
the cluster of petals small as a flea
like gnats accidentally inhaled —
a universe to another creature. Birds are not
safe until they fledge and learn
to distinguish between hemlock and carrot. Simple
as a seed taken for seven days to stop an egg from embedding.
LUXURY
I know I am not supposed to like it,
alone at the table, peeling the chicken
skin off, and into my mouth. The crisp
salt, sting of hot sauce
stuck to fingers, and I am eating
the prettiest piece first. I served no one
and ate entirely with my hands.
The puff and split of rice browned
in oil with onion and garlic. The sloppiness
of a hand crushed tomato, a jigsaw
of sweet and acidic. The perfume of cilantro,
no doubt stuck in my teeth and flesh of chicken
spurred to greatness with a rub of comino.
The tortilla torn apart, breathing
because its perfect edge was singed by fire.
The rinse and spin of digestion, a splash more
wine to soften when I think I am
a dandelion blown apart
curved like the bill of a hummingbird
and thigh. My heart is never still,
bloomed, outstretched, and
foolish. When I squeeze a cut
lemon, I close my eyes. Robins
can’t be captive, they die
within moments of human contact.
I’d rather let them fly
next to the orange butterflies, and
shake the dull sepia feathers
located on the belly, which are slightly
brighter on men.
WHAT GENERAL MOTORS DOESN’T PROTECT
I drive in wide circles, the click
of my steering is a card hitting a spoke
my father tilts his head,
all sound
is interruption.
The engine amplified
when played back from a brick wall.
My father worked
in a landscape
of machines lit by spark.
Sheared metal matches
seven days a week.
A meteor shower
too close to earth.
The wooden dowel he presses
against his ear, the other
end to the engine.
In bright sun my father
focuses on the maple,
tell me when the cicadas start singing.
ENGINE BLOCK (EXPLODED VIEW)
1. Patternmaking
The owl doesn’t talk about the distance between him and Lake Michigan,
he tries to remove the coal ash from his ear tufts.
2. Coremaking
They rotate. As one owl is dragged out, another is brought in.
Do you think owls are afraid of water?
3. Molding
The owl thinks he hears Lake Michigan when he pours the melted metal in the core.
Lake Michigan is iron gray; where is the sun in all this steel?
4. Melting and Pouring
His feathers, sticky corn silk. Did the shakeout make a vibration, a wave burning sand.
The foreman doesn’t stop counting.
5. Cleaning
Not even the owl can see in the dark. A rogue wave buries a freighter.
After twelve hours he forgets light, he forgets water.
SECOND SHIFT
A thunder through the chest.
All metal and two hundred pigeons
cannot cover the fire
from rafter to machine.
The heat crawls under
hard hat
a slap of summer
so heavy
it is an engine.
The carbon in nodular iron
rings like crystal
along my father’s collar.
He pretends his sleeves are waves,
not the stiff denim
my mother irons, buttons,
and hangs. The delicate stitch
of my father’s hand removed
the white thread along the edge
of a pocket to make room
for his mechanical pencil.
I don’t know
if I will inherit
his shirt. After repeated
washing, it fades into a phantom
blue, like the eyes of my husband
who’s shirts have never been
stretched out like a wing
held and seared with metal
THE OWLS OF SAGINAW
When my grandfather caught
the long hair of women
preened in the attic
of his wings
with a layer of vaseline under
their lipstick kisses
a line of dewy
red tulips,
the only
evidence
of his hunt.
One, two, three.
He knew his
sons recognized
how cold
the moon was,
silk against skin. He has always
fed himself
never saying a word
about all those
yellow eyes, flashlights
who mimic him
and believe in prey
by sight.
RESURRECTION OF PREY
How the owl drags
her body slack and she offers her head.
What he spilts with his bill
are soft petals.
Her ear’s soft petal,
conscious of the snap.
Don’t worry,
the counter is clean.
Her neck,
wrapped and placed back in her body.
Head missing,
the heart and liver beside a candle
not death, but a blessing.
When she counts to five, he will
fold his napkin.
Bone, silver,
and hair. She is an earring
and molar. One pendant of
our Lady of Guadalupe.
A little water and the plucked
heads of geraniums wash her thighs,
she will save the trusses
blanched in her sweat
and leave sticky prints on his table.
He doesn’t like to be reminded of her,
this early in the morning.
There is nothing he can’t catch
and undress. Catch and undo, his silent flight.