A Bestiary for Anna
Before it vanished into the scrubby tangles
of brush that mark the edge of our yard,
there was the on-the-prowl bobcat we watched
from the window stride across our lawn not long
before the memorial began. A day or two later,
an otter—the first one ever seen in the pond
behind your home—left a little V-shaped wake
that widened, disappeared. Toward the end
of a hike last month, a pileated woodpecker
followed your family for a half mile, maybe more,
and then—I can’t help but add to this bestiary
of you—there was that goldfinch, not much
more than a fleeting yellow blur, I spotted
the same week your heart stopped during
a X-country race for reasons we’ll never know.
I’m guessing you’d hate this. I’m guessing
you’d bring your quick-draw stink-eye blazing
to any thought that a chance glimpse of some
creature might offer a version of you. And still,
that lemon-colored flash seemed like an echo
of the poem that still hangs in your room
in which goldfinch feast on thorns. In the end,
we can’t help it. Now that you’re gone,
we’re left trying to pretend the world remains
a legible place, one that might on occasion
hurl forth a message anyone could read
as easily as the paper scrap I pulled from
a fortune cookie on the night we learned
you were going to die: May winds blow
softly upon your sprint. There’s no chance you
wouldn’t call bullshit on any of us looking for
meaning in how spirit is confused with sprint,
and yet that botched blessing is taped to our fridge
nonetheless. It’s not as if there’s solace to find
anywhere else. It’s not as if there are words trying
to make sense of your death that wouldn’t also
be packed with mistakes, much like this poem,
adrift with descriptions of animals when all
in the end I’m trying to say is Anna, we miss you.
Sweet Anna, you are missed.