The Powerplants of Jupiter
The animalia inherent to a cumulus sky
tracking seaward over a river lined
with morassed, red mangroves,
the lizard tenements of live oaks
older than St. Augustine shaking
pollen from their yellow-green vestments—
sometimes I have to imagine it back.
My brother says the pollen in Florida
is just as bad as ever. That’s one thing
I don’t miss, I told him. What I do miss
is everything else. Was remembering,
for example, sneaking out onto golf courses
after hours to fish the bass in duckweed ponds,
and counting the eyes of alligators
where they pierced yellow the surface
of the water. There’s a picture of us
as kids in Cocoa Beach, smiling
wearing alligator foot necklaces,
probably bought after an airboat ride
through retreating marshland, or after
visiting one of those interchangeable farms
to gawk at gators leaping for rotisserie chickens.
One thing I regret not doing in Michigan
was visiting the state’s only alligator sanctuary
in Critchlow. I watched online
as new arrivals were named by poll,
donations requested for care—
some of the animals missing limbs
or slashed across the face, eyeless
from buckshot and arrowshot, the kind of thing
my high school friends joked about doing
at night out on the chains of lakes. Myself
I never wanted a gun, except when I was a kid,
and thought war was a pastime. My parents tell me
as a toddler I pretended myself a builder.
I carried an L-shaped block, swung it
like a hammer. Then one day,
I turned it around and it became a pistol.
My dad has a gun somewhere in their house,
but I’ve never seen it. Which is my preference,
all good alligators never let themselves be seen
beyond the double glow of vision,
beyond the surrendered refuse of their bodies—
teeth on cords for kids to wear at Disney,
gator claw back scratchers, you get the idea.
The body as commodity, same impulse
that gave us freak shows, one of which
collapsed in Gibsonton, FL, where Lobster Boy
shot his daughter’s fiancé to death.
Later, his own family put a price on his head.
When I drove there looking for more of the story,
all I found was an overgrown yard,
a kid’s tricycle threaded with vines.
That town is circus murals
painted on the flanks of failing restaurants,
all-day happy hours, those who remain
propped up by the phosphate plant
on the other side of the salt-crowned Alafia River.
I used to cross that river every few weeks
on my way home from college—
home on an island that will disappear,
home I haven’t been to in years,
the Alafia darkly sliding by like an animal
hungry for the powerplants of Jupiter.