No Miracle, No Act of God
What should not stay unsaid will grow wild
as chicory flowers, as the mushrooms
on the damp side of a tree. In that time after sunrise
but before the light hits the shore, that time animals know,
my father took me in his canoe onto Greenwood Pond.
Passing by Flint’s cabin and the A-frames,
we saw a doe’s body lying in the shallows
where the reeds have grown high. A gunshot wound
in her left side browned the water, which was strange,
my father said, because it wasn’t hunting season.
Strange because it was five in the morning
and the wound still bled. That night I dreamt
about a forest fire and all the animals of the earth
either running toward it or from it
because there were no other ways to go.
Once, I rode my bike down a hill into
the side of a shed because I felt for the first time
that invincible charge coursing through me
or because I didn’t, because I never have,
not even at ten, and when the shed grew closer,
I held out my hand to protect myself, or to say No,
to say This will not happen, what no miracle, no act of God
could stop. It was physics: motion and speed
and impact. My palm hit the shed
then my palm hit my forehead, my elbow still locked,
the bone snapped back. In the moments before
my voice formed a cry, I lay on the ground and laughed
because I was alive. No one should be this glad
to be broken. The doe in the lake, water filling her nostrils,
was she glad? Or the hunter who watched the shapes
the moon made through the trees—was he glad
when the doe bounded up twice, then fell,
flopped in the water, the splash not as loud as the gun
but as deafening? Was he glad before that,
in the woods past dark, when she stepped into light?
In that same town, a woman was killed Thanksgiving morning
while hanging laundry out to dry. It was early,
the cold frosting the grass, and because it was cold
she wore white gloves, which looked to a different hunter
through the forest of dead birches to be the white
of a deer’s tail. Two hunters in the same town,
and if they were glad, then why, both times,
did they leave the doe? It’s easy to believe in God
when you live below mountains, covered by the shadow
of something larger. My father and I hiked up a mountain,
and on the way up we didn’t speak, and on its crown
we said even less. No revelation: only the clouds,
and the trees, and the clouds overlapping the trees,
but there was something I wanted to tell him,
not knowing what it was. Lately I’ve been having
the same dream, the one where the moon
lights up all the white in the world and the doe
with the gunshot wound in her side runs toward the lake
to swim to that island off shore. But she does not make it,
takes two giant leaps in the shallows and reeds, and falls,
and for hours she watches the moon slip through the sky
and behind the mountain. And when the moon is hidden,
all goes dark. And the spots on the doe’s back blow out
like candles. And the hunter is gone, scared by what
he’s done. And the doe is alone except for the otter
that slips in at the shore, except for the loon that wails
its grief. In this dream, I know the doe is my father,
which doesn’t make sense, but I know it’s true,
so I bend down in the water beside the doe and stroke
her head. Dear dying doe, dear wet father—stay
a little longer. There is something I needed to tell you.
“No Miracle, No Act of God” is from Novena (Pleiades Press, 2017).