Just what I need in plague season
Dead crow on my fender
parked here barely ten minutes
likely fell from that crab-apple’s wide
branches stretching across the sidewalk
scattering blossoms and a funeral bird
just what I need in plague season
first glance looks like clotted fabric
or rain-soaked flowers blown down by
sudden gusts but it’s an innocent
black bird on my rain-splattered car
dustpan slides this feathered soul
into a trash barrel while I shiver
inside my rain-soaked jacket
see other fear-masked soggy humans
mailing bills with nervous gloved hands
feel the vibration of pandemic fire
silent invisible messenger
threatening sickness and death
though gloomy discouraged lonely
I’m here for whatever
incomprehensible reasons
a cranky being walking
around sad-singing alive.
- © Nina Rubinstein Alonso 2022
Nina Rubinstein Alonso’s work has appeared in Ploughshares, The New Yorker, Ibbetson Street, Bluepepper, Writing in a Woman’s Voice, Broadkill Review, etc. Her book This Body was published by David Godine Press, her chapbook Riot Wake is upcoming from Cervena Barva Press, and a poetry collection about travel in Spain is in the works.
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