Self Portrait as a Deer My Father Killed
It’s true there are things I do not know —
the paths of arrows, the careful sharpening of metal,
or why you plant acres of radishes
to lure us,
peas and wheat like false gods,
little daggers jabbed into our land,
but I know, gutted and hung from my hind hooves,
more than you about danger —
it’s the scent of blood dripping over rust.
It moves the way storms do, over time
and fields and as much as you try
you will never scrub it from your skin.
What I know is the secret language
of moss, the slow rhythm
of rain that moves
all beings and wouldn’t you like to see it?
Wouldn’t you like to have touched
the soft white belly of my young,
see their pink tongues
bend at the grass? Wouldn’t you like to have smelled
the air the way I do, just before dawn?
Musk and marrow and poison leaves
turning red in their rut.
Think of your youngest daughter.
Did you know she came to me
last night in this garage?
Pressed her little hand to my fur,
stared into my open body, my ribs spread
as if to make the perfect cave for her.
And when she touched my raw flesh I wanted to say
come, rest in me,
but in truth I said nothing
and her child ears heard it all
— the cold mist of that early morning, the swift
whisp of your bowstring, arrowhead against bone,
the blood gushing, making
an easy trail for you
— the way a fawn hears the unsnapping
of a single leaf from its branch.
*
Anna Girgenti was a recipient of the 2018 Iowa Chapbook Prize from the University of Iowa for her poetry chapbook, “Asking for Directions.” Her writing has since appeared in Cider Press Review, Lunch Ticket, Cumberland River Review, Zone 3 Press, and Mid-American Review.