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Otolith

Page 2

by Emily Nilsen


  Meanwhile, in His Dreams

  My grandfather swims through the arteries

  of a blue whale. He heard its 400-pound heart

  beating a mile away. I encourage my inconsequence

  by choosing the longest checkout line in Safeway,

  surrounded by expired discounts, twenty-eight types

  of gum, and not one of those magazines

  can explain where the whales breed.

  We hide grief in secret pockets

  of our trench coats. Magic!

  It emerges like a bunch of gladiolas,

  hops away a red-eyed rabbit.

  My grandfather knew sleight of hand,

  a glass of water disappearing

  beneath his hat. Ten past midnight

  he phones to ask where we have left him —

  the sea, pale as a desert.

  Meanwhile, I Have Started to Fold Things

  A beet-stained dinner napkin.

  The aluminum lining of chocolate bars.

  Unwanted receipts. And sometimes

  a square of two-ply as I sit

  on the toilet looking at the mole

  over my kneecap, a wonky planet

  mooned by freckles, my zebra-print skirt

  far away on the floor, washed up

  against ankles. Nothing fancy,

  no origami cranes or ninja

  stars: just squares. While waiting

  to board the Greyhound I shared my umbrella

  with a one-legged boy who told me

  a 1 mm thick

  piece of paper folded in half

  100 times is thicker

  than the observable diameter

  of the universe,

  and would ascend

  133,989,789,471

  light years away.

  My Lip Sits in a Petri Dish, Meanwhile

  a city is being nailed onto the plains.

  I hadn’t noticed that quiet hammering,

  the drill-drill-drilling of plywood taming shadows

  to shade. It grows faster than a camp

  of refugees. Well, says the city as it hangs

  a hard hat over itself, the topography

  makes it easy. Last night, it fit

  under a garter snake, under the thumb

  pad of a vole, really

  it was just a scratch

  in the silt, a friendly-like pssssssst!

  how-de-do? Now it’s lumbering

  whole, a droopy-eyed klutz falling

  drunk into the gold, wind-whispered

  foothills only fireflies and coyotes

  called home. The light out there

  is reckless. It’s eaten too many

  blue whales and neon dinosaurs, cranky

  hearts spin in a centrifuge, bloodshot

  from over-sugaring. On a high-

  rise patio tiny critters cloister and cauliflower

  overgrows in clumped canopies, bursting out

  a rooftop pot, my god —

  all I see are lips, lips, perfect lips,

  overripe unpicked strawberry

  mouths, everywhere. They are

  everywhere.

  Intertidal

  Pre-dawn Walk

  In the season of creaking rivers

  I am kept awake.

  Pre-dawn Walk

  Past the hardware store

  and the on-sale hibachi. Past

  the cat curled up in the used

  bookstore window. Past the chain-link

  fence draped in dried-up hops and past

  a garden of rotting squash. Past the woman

  who thinks she is Edith Piaf and past the brick

  building outlined in ivy. Past the mannequin clad

  in fishnet stockings and past the barbershop pole

  and a floor of unswept hair. To the lake, I walk

  down to the lake. Past the bakery

  with its lights on and past

  the hockey rink with its lights

  off. Past the truck idling outside the diner

  and past a raven pecking tatty crusts

  from a brown bag. This is the past: the lake

  was a river. I walk over pebbles

  towards where sturgeon swim, caught

  in their solitary, rugged routes.

  Fragile Morning of the Landlady

  She shovels the first snowfall

  into five even piles. Hinging at the hips,

  bending to sidewalk, her terrycloth robe

  belted to keep

  her heart in. Yesterday,

  she raked a mulch of maple

  over the curb. In a divisive November

  the electric orange of street lamps keeps us

  contained. Her bleak determination.

  My silent immobility.

  Fragile Mornings of the Couple Moored to the Dock Next Door

  The argument long lost. She sits on the deck,

  stubbornly slicing apples into crescent moons

  with a dull pocket knife.

  Fragile Morning of the Farmhand Who Longs to Leave

  The cows surrounded her as she pushed

  to the middle of the field through knee-deep snow,

  tin bucket on her arm. Between the legs of cattle

  and an oak she watched ocean shuffling stiff slabs

  of water. Her neck craned to see it: a fishing boat

  splitting the sea down its middle. Milk froth.

  Fragile Evenings of the Man in His Trawler

  Slumped at the table nook

  that is kitchen, living and dining room,

  he unbuttons his jeans and winces pulling

  suspenders from his shoulders. Northwest Passage clicks

  off, and as he leans to flip the well-worn cassette

  notices three piles of sawdust on the floor.

  He remembers this detail while writing

  a letter he will never send to his daughter.

  How good it felt

  to hold one hand in the other, bound

  only to the boat, its gentle lullaby,

  and the clink of mugs in sync with rain.

  Fragile Night of the Hitchhiker from Up Island

  Cougar full of deer

  lugs a sagging second set

  of lung, heart, liver up the slide path —

  Pow!

  Gunshot ripples the sea. He lowers

  the rifle butt from his shoulder notch, leans

  against the boat’s plywood windshield, ’70s hull

  rotted like his back molar. Everything with a tender patch,

  a fibreglass warble. Even the hard edge mildews. Smack the land, the land

  smacks back. Driving that train, high on cocaine, whistling to keep busy

  through the goddamn rain. Jean jacket soaked in trouble. No woman

  to lean over. He can still smell her neck, hot in the sun.

  Now he’s close, all up in his own face. He went out

  like that, fast and loud —

  with a bang.

  Fragile Hour of Dementia

  The man at the dock paints sailboats

  the colour of a cloudless day reflected off seawater.

  His back is bare, sun-chewed sinew. He is made of copper

  coins and flecked in blue. He hides sculpins in the froth of his beard

  and once outswam a pirate off the Polynesian Islands.

  Listen, he walks, callused heels

  sliverless in a hum of

  la-laa la-laa la-laa

  An Address to Dusk

  He takes me to the creek

  and as he whittles a fallen cottonwood branch,

  I wash his shirt. He heads into the forest

  and drapes the shirt over his back.

  Still heavy with water

  it drips like a dark fish

  into the soil.

  I leave you and follow.

  An Address to Dusk

  You are behind me

  in the kitchen as I pack a suitcase fu
ll

  of wares: wooden spoons, knives wrapped

  in newspaper, a cast iron, the threadbare

  dishcloth from Bulgaria.

  At the sink, turning

  on the tap, I catch his reflection

  in the window. And through him, you:

  an overturned canoe, lake simmering under

  evening sun, a pile of half-stacked wood

  bitten yellow with wolf lichen, laundry

  hanging limply on the line.

  An Address to Dusk

  Alone in the alpine meadow

  beneath a ridge. Moon rises bent

  like the rib of a deer. Stars begin

  to peck at the sky, cleaning

  and drying bones

  of the day.

  Screef

  By noon I had opened the ground a thousand times.

  Fast terrain. Trenches. Shovel-

  split the earth no wider than a pack of smokes.

  Pine after pine slid in.

  Boot stomp. Close the hole. Move on. Easy.

  I’m singing — hell

  yeah — I’m singing. Sun through

  cloud cover leading my limbs

  as we two-step over slash piles.

  Black-capped chickadees call out

  from a dog-haired stand of spruce:

  Cheeese-burger! Cheeese-burger!

  Fastened to my ears like a pair

  of garnet clip-ons.

  Every camp has a legend.

  Breakfast, over scrambled eggs:

  Did you hear? That old guy shot a bison.

  Butchered strips dry over a snag.

  Stink of death pushed up our noses.

  Bears loiter, ping-pinging off

  the electric fence. He was ancient: at least forty.

  Kept to himself. A ruddy-faced Czech. — There he is

  traipsing through thicket, shouldering

  the muscle of dusk in his backlit mane

  of briny hair. Tree-burl calves.

  Humpback.

  Kid, I was born brave.

  Never had an apron to hide under.

  I am not yet my older self. Everything is

  intact, enclosed by spaciousness: I wash my face

  in a trough of muddy water and sleep blindfolded

  to fend off evening sun. I learn how to shotgun

  beer and smoke when angry, bluff-charging

  the future. I try on other animal hides

  for size. My lungs, pink as a wolf

  tongue, strong as a set of moose antlers

  mounted to my spine. My skin not yet

  chapped to rawhide nor baggy

  as the cook’s muck-brown lab

  and her wobbling sea of lipomas. But —

  in certain light, maybe, maybe I notice

  airborne pesticides. The list

  of brands we inhale grows longer

  than my arm. Fungicides, insect-

  icides, herbicides. Clusters of alveoli

  tweak out, a bad case of witch’s broom.

  Hooked on antihistamines. Neck high

  in fireweed. Wasps scramble out of land-mined

  stumps with a low cello drone to protect

  the busted city. You’ll hear ’em

  before you see ’em. Keep your shovel in the ground

  and for godssake stay still. Fat lips. Swollen eyelids.

  Run —

  to the marsh. Bites puckered

  in swamp water. Piss on ’em. Cover yourself

  in pennies. Under the glint of copper

  my buck-naked heart jolts

  upright, twitching.

  There are stories underfoot:

  balled-up, overturned, now pricked

  by caulk boots as we stuff a forest

  into the ground. Here in the once timbered

  shade, three wolves circled a wobbling fawn

  and a fleet of moosehide canoes glided

  breathlessly by the oxbow…

  Bundles of fifteen, swaddled

  in Saran Wrap: spring-tipped, greener

  than youth. Mudslide. Cattle. Snow.

  Fire will eventually take these trees.

  Hot days in the bush get to your head.

  Price-per-tree calculations mix with thoughts

  of last night’s salty mashed potatoes, an empty

  rum bottle in the ditch and one drunk-ass

  faller-buncher. My brain’s on epinephrine

  and Kelvin from the Ivory Coast swats deer flies

  with a scythe of grass. I’ll drink any lake

  under the table and scare bucks out the creek

  with my dirty shins. Bushed. Hotheaded

  blood back-eddies into a semi-stagnant

  drip-drip-drip (as we bend

  then rise

  then bend) on slow drill. Pacing

  to be let out. We just have to —

  Storm on the griddle.

  Clouds pinwheel, horizon

  forked by lightning. Lick-pop

  of a fast fire.

  As for the hundreds

  of undug holes that will one day

  need filling, I can almost hear them:

  their pitch, taut as tinnitus, aching

  out of an open field, gaping like

  un-mothered mouths thirsty for rain.

  You are at the junction

  where ground wasps nestled

  in low-lying stumps and the mountain ash

  dropped its berries, caking the floor with orange

  and red. Now the forest is all jaw. Charred

  moss on logs. You walk through what was once

  an aspen grove and snag your sleeve on a black branch.

  Cotton rips. You walk on. When your boots scuff

  the ground, soot billows, sticks to the sweat

  on your cheeks. Your teeth and tongue dried

  with ash. The earth still warm with smouldering roots.

  You kneel in search of pine cones, seed pods, the crest

  of a bulb, something that promises life. Your hands,

  thickened by work, feel nothing. The wind finally

  reaches you. It runs through the vacant canopy

  and then between the buttons and thread

  of your shirt. It carries the call of an owl

  pulling night forward. The ripped cloth

  on your elbow is a pine white butterfly,

  lifting as you turn to leave.

  Meanwhile

  On Day Eight We Cross the Arctic Circle

  We appear on the other side scrubbed clean

  by wind. It is an imaginary line, a coin pulled

  from my ear, earth’s receding hairline, a cough

  on the windowpane, a seasonal fen that hopes

  to replenish itself, hardened yet marshy underfoot,

  an ache and an itch. It kills birds in the morning

  then brings them back to life. It’s the vocal cord

  of caribou. Tied to its own demise. It has no texture

  but that which it crosses. Walking backwards

  will not undo what has been done.

  Midnight Sun

  The mother wanders the hallway

  uncertain of time. She hides

  in her nightgown. How pale her cheeks

  since her stepson drowned at sea

  two weeks ago. A jug of sheep milk

  sloshes side to side on the table.

  Her family drank 4 L a day.

  The ship caught fire, there were

  no survivors. In the kitchen

  she told me. I looked at my hands,

  they were far away on my lap,

  and my lap was at the bottom

  of a cliff, and the cliff was covered

  in white roses, and the roses were falling

  all over us.

  Yesterday I was paid to scythe

  the field. I tried to slice the day

  in two. My work shirt and jeans stiff

  as plywood in the unbroken gale
r />   that blows evening into morning. At 5 a.m.

  the farmer washes his car, buckets water

  over the black hood under a V

  of honking geese. His black dog

  barking. Night keeps its distance

  from the farm, cooling the pith

  of caves, gnawing winter fleas

  from its hind leg.

  The village arrives in whispers.

  Heads bowed, through the door.

  The mother is frying cod in butter.

  We ate five hundred kilograms of meat every year.

  She speaks to keep death away.

  Lamb and fish. Smoked dark

  lamb, boiled fish. Darkness,

  the smoke. The village fumbles

  for wool blankets thick enough

  to snuff out the bright, layers

  them over windows. Stuffs

  door frames. I never met the boy.

  In the kitchen’s muffled light

  four shapes feel around for cutlery

  and plates. I cradle a stack

  of blankets, a foreigner who

  can’t find the word

  for goodnight.

  Little Stick Man with a Knife

  Traplines are not lines,

  but tracts of land bordered by ridges

  and valleys, stitched together by river.

  Harold sits at his living room table, crust of age

  in the corners of his mouth. Coiled on a cabinet

  of fine china, a cougar, shiny-eyed and stiller

  than wood. Teacups rattle as Harold crosses

  the broadloom. He walks like a mudslide,

  pulls out a pile of papers, crayon lines

  still bright as lipstick. His mother made him

  trap muskrat in the ditch. Harold Age Eight

  drew them strung on the fence and him,

  little stick man with a knife. Using his palm

  as a map, he traces the route, half a century walking

  his own animal trail, in, out the pines, the light

  of winter closing over his back. In the garage,

 

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