alone tonight in the woods or in a silo.
   Mirror for popping your zits, hand dryer
   for drying your hair, your musty coat.
   You’ve come to run warm water
   over hands you can no longer feel,
   come to sit and rest and do nothing,
   and think nothing, and be no one.
   You ask the boy at the counter
   if you can have some water. He nods,
   tapping his foot to a bluegrass tune,
   slides a paper cup toward you
   with a smooth hand, asks
   out of habit if that will be everything.
   PRIMER
   And what if you have nothing?
   I pick up a stick. Yes, that’s always first.
   And next? I see what I can see around me.
   Find the sun or moon. Find high ground.
   Find north by where the moss grows.
   Yes. Now close your eyes. Find them.
   The sun’s behind. I can feel it
   on my neck. High ground’s to my right.
   North’s ahead. Yes. And the wind?
   The wind’s west. It cools my left temple.
   Yes. And next? If I can bug out
   I bug out. Otherwise I go high
   and dig a foxhole and tie something bright
   above me. You’re forgetting something.
   Right—first I cut my name in the dirt,
   then I go high. Yes. And next?
   I walk a loop with my bright thing in sight.
   If I find a better stick I switch for it.
   Yes. And if you need to cry?
   I crawl inside my foxhole and cry.
   And what do you tell yourself as you cry?
   Someone’s coming. Yes. And what if
   no one comes? Each hour I call
   in all directions. I listen. Yes.
   And what do you listen for?
   Sounds that shouldn’t be there. Yes.
   Sounds that should be there but aren’t.
   Yes. And what have you heard
   since we started? A bird. Yes. Another bird
   far away. Yes. A gust in the trees.
   Yes. Your voice, if your voice counts.
   Yes, my voice counts.
   THE MUSCLES IN THEIR THROATS
   The Neanderthals tracked mammoths through the snow.
   Postholed twice between each of the creature’s
   blue-hued prints. Peered down at the toe digs, hoping
   for any fissures in the powder that might be a sign
   of weakness. Nightmares larger than the caves
   they slept in. Before they hunted them, they fire-hardened
   their spears, but as they bored holes in the midriff
   and carted home great slabs of marbled meat, and later,
   as they boiled the pelvis for a red-marrow broth,
   we don’t know for certain how much they could say
   to each other. It’s no different now. My brother
   strips boughs off the wind-stunted pines at tree line
   and stacks them on a boulder. I drag them over scree
   to the A-frame we’re building on the shore of a nameless
   alpine lake. We need the branches for insulation.
   A foot thick for every ten degrees below sixty.
   This high up, it’s bound to freeze. We know the spearheads
   were basically the same for two hundred thousand years.
   And the design worked, though the hunters
   had to get feverishly close—the bones we’ve studied
   are riddled with burst fractures, the skulls
   remolded from concussions. I squeeze inside
   to see where the light is breaking through.
   In the cold I watch my breath escaping out the holes.
   But when I try to tell my brother where to add
   more boughs, he darkens what’s already dark enough.
   The horseshoe-shaped muscles in their throats
   were anatomically modern, so there’s no real reason
   they wouldn’t have been able to speak. When scientists
   finish a life-size model of the esophagus, we’ll finally hear
   what their voices must have sounded like.
   LODESTAR
   Nothing you’ll find more orphan than the heart.
   The dim mission of its reptile-eyed insomnia,
   its nameless drive, its bulging catalytic beat.
   The night sky wheels with the same fever, as if thrown
   from a bowler’s hand with english on it. Orion.
   Ursa Minor. You cannot constellate desire any more
   than you can braid cord from the tongue’s sinewed utterance
   of a name, a name hallowed at night into the wind,
   the wind tethered to the earth like flame to black spruce,
   quartered and four years dried. Beargrass. Monk’s Hood Lichen.
   Methuselah’s Beard. Old Man on the Mountain.
   You take your bearings by a belt of pulsing stars.
   You turn to reckon with the one that doesn’t move.
   Polaris. Dog’s Tail. Leiðarstjarna. Nail. Mismar.
   GATHERING FIREWOOD ON TINPAN
   I bundle them against my chest, not sure
   if they’re dry enough. Gauging how long
   they’ll keep me warm by the thickness.
   I step around carefully, looking for
   the deadest, searching the low places
   for something small and old that will catch.
   I pick up the dander loosened
   as my father folds his hands, lowers his head.
   The rolling thunder on the surface of a nail.
   I pick up the cross that seesaws his chest
   with each step. The day I lost my faith.
   The night my dog ran away and came back sick.
   The battery pump of her final breath.
   Still wondering if she left alone,
   or if my father walked her out of this world.
   Still wondering what he used for a leash.
   I go further into the trees and find
   more fuel. My friends faded on oxy
   and percocet. My cousin Josh
   buried young in the floodplain.
   My brother and the ways I burden him.
   Living it over and over each night.
   My father walking into every dream.
   My fire not bright enough to reveal anything.
   Not even his face. Not even the leash.
   COUSIN JOSH ON DOOMSDAY
   Fargo, North Dakota
   It don’t matter what you believe. Could be a chunk
   of the sun wipin out the grid just as likely
   as the Lord Himself snuffin us out one by one
   like a bunch of candlewicks. Could be a oil shortage.
   Or the souls of the dead come back to reckon.
   My buddy Critter figures it’ll be the Lake of Fire—
   all the flesh dripping off our dicks while we drown
   at the same time over and over forever.
   But most folks won’t tell you what they believe.
   My ma, she never broke silence on the issue.
   My old man, he says I’m crazy. Says I’m gonna drink
   myself to death before anything else gets the chance.
   Me, I got my chips pushed in for somethin natural.
   A meteor maybe. Or a polar flip. But like I said:
   when you’re throwin pies, it don’t matter much what the flavor is.
   It’s more folks thinkin like me than you’d think.
   And like most of us, I got a bug-in plan for stayin put,
   but I also got a bug-out plan for gettin gone.
   Not that I’m gonna tell you where I’m goin.
   It’s high in the mountains—I’ll say that much—
   but that’s all the scat this cat’s gonna leave in the sand
   for you to track by. Ah, who am I kiddin?
   I’ll be stuck in this town till God sucks
 &
nbsp; his last breath. Let me ask you somethin:
   You think I’m crazy to have a hundred pounds of Spam
   buried in caches? You think I’m crazy to have Critter
   shoot me with a .22 so I know what it feels like
   to get hit in a bulletproof vest? Well, you know what?
   I hope I am crazy. I hope I’m the craziest son of a bitch
   you ever met.
   ASKING FOR WORK AT FLATHEAD BIBLE
   All the positions are filled, the pastor said,
   but you could be a floater. Meaning
   I woke each morning not knowing
   and at breakfast a man named Archer
   told me what to get busy with. On Monday
   I hunched in the kitchen scrubbing beets.
   On Tuesday I helped the carpenters
   dismantle a barn’s gable. The shifts blurred
   like faces seen from a carousel pony.
   In the laundry I folded linens, in the pottery
   I cleaned the kiln, my hands getting nicks
   from pulling shingles, stains from applying
   glazes, flaky skin from scrubbing
   at the scullery’s foot-pedal sink.
   But none of the wear showed deeply.
   Archer called them wishy-washy hands.
   Make up your mind, he teased, flooding
   flapjacks with his homemade syrup.
   Hey, Pastor, he said, get a load of these.
   He laid his hands on my hands and turned them
   as a father might turn turtles to show his son
   the belly patterns. The pastor squinted.
   What am I looking for? By the time
   Archer sent me back to the carpenters
   they had the second story down. In the kitchen
   the lunch menu changed. The laundry granted
   one towel per camper instead of two.
   It was easier to adapt than you’d think.
   If I had a hammer in my hand, I pulled nails.
   If I had a sheet, I found the corners.
   JIM TUCKER LETS ME SLEEP IN HIS TREEHOUSE
   North Platte, Nebraska
   My son built this whole thing: measured
   every board, pounded every nail.
   Did the trapdoors, windows, knocked out
   a wall right where you’re standin to fit
   the kitchen. Got so he just about lived
   in this tree. Did his homework up here,
   took meals, ran a cord from the porch
   for a heater, even kept a pisspot and a shitter.
   His mother fussed, but I warned her:
   chain a dog to a leash and all you got
   is a beast chewin leather. Let the same dog roam
   and it’ll circle back home every time,
   and that’s how it was with Brian.
   My boy loved this tree and this tree kept him
   busy. Taught him the eye for true,
   the eye for level, the eye for inches.
   Once you see the world that way
   there aint no shakin it. Take these shims here.
   That there’s four inches, that’s three,
   that’s three and a quarter, that’s five, that’s five,
   that’s four, and I can go on like that.
   So could Brian before we lost him
   to the war. Matter a fact, he had the eye
   twice as dialed as mine—could name it
   down to an eighth, even a sixteenth.
   More than once I called bullshit
   and took out the ruler, but my boy
   was always right, even when he saw it
   from an odd angle. My wife says I got
   an inflated sense of my own manhood,
   but I tell her I know ten inches
   when I see ten inches. And she says,
   Jim Tucker, if only you could see
   how odd it looks from this angle.
   Bet you never heard that one before.
   TO THE RAIL COP AT RATHDRUM
   You knew you had me for trespassing,
   and probably for vandalism, but you weren’t sure
   how to charge me for the fire still burning
   under the train bridge in the railyard you patrolled
   nightly, the flames throwing a shiver-glow
   on the tagged girders, the rusted tracks, the plastic
   unblinking eyeball on the seeable side
   of your otherwise unremarkable face.
   Arson, you thought, but you knew the word
   wouldn’t hold up in court. You unbuckled my pack,
   hoping for more—dope, or a fingerprinted weapon,
   or a scale for weighing and selling. You ran
   your flashlight over the bushes, needling the beam
   through the barest branches, shocking
   the dry leaves with the raw bleached-out colors
   of themselves. With your one good eye you caught
   my brother’s duffle among the torqued shapes
   of your shadow-show and realized
   I wasn’t alone. You cuffed me to a piling.
   Tiptoed a search of the firelight’s perimeter.
   Asked me who it was out there in the dark.
   Asked me why he was hiding. Said my silence
   couldn’t protect him, and only made it worse
   for me. You radioed for backup, widened
   your circle, your boots glissading the sloped beds
   of the railroad tailings. You offered to cut me
   a deal for a name. Said the cold truth
   was my buddy wouldn’t protect me, not once
   he was caught, not once he was facing the law.
   You’d be surprised, you said. You asked how well
   I knew him. Said I should think about that
   before I threw myself on the tracks.
   Think about that: Who was it out there
   in the cold dark hiding? How well did I know him?
   As if you needed those questions
   half as much as I did, as if you had any stake
   in this. And sure enough, after the sky tipped
   the dipper into the iron wash of dawn
   and my coals smoldered on
   in the ritalin moods of the wind, and after failing
   to find any ID tucked in the socks
   at the bottom of the duffle, you gave up—
   drove home, and left me with the day shift.
   EARSHOT
   Sure, I was provoked. Eggshell carefully
   opened with the tip of a needle-nose.
   Black Cat slid down into the yolk.
   Lit with a Bic. Thrown so the firecracker
   clapped against my ear. Silence tunneling
   after, embryo shampooing my hair. Almost
   choreographed. More than my brother
   hoped for, I know. But believe me when I say
   there was no excess in the flat head nail
   jeweled through the two-by-four.
   No hesitation in my hands, choked up
   for accuracy and control. Shhh—
   I can’t hear you anyway. Stop running.
   I need to be three feet from your skull.
   FLOOD OF ’97
   In the flood of ’97 everything went to shit.
   Somewhere in Canada the Red River clogged
   and coated the roads in downtown Fargo
   as high as the stop signs. Not much was saved.
   Dark water churned for a moment as the river
   tipped over, then a stillness filled the basements.
   It was the same all over town. The rambler rooftops
   looming like islands. Foundations rotting
   in the afternoon silence. Everybody camping
   in a cousin’s backyard, or staying with an uncle
   down in Fergus. The old folks at Eventide
   had to move to Oak Grove and spent two weeks
   sleeping on cots in the brick chapel.
   When the ice sheets broke and brown water
   flowed up to Hu
dson Bay, the basements drained
   and people opened their own front doors
   like strangers. Tiptoed through bedrooms
   and ran hands over water-warped walls.
   Went in the kitchen and swore the fridge
   had been moved. All summer, people found
   rusty things they didn’t recognize. Things
   that must have floated in from other homes.
   Fathers walked the silty streets and knocked
   on doors, trying to find the rightful owner
   of a shovel or a broom. An elderly woman returned
   to Eventide and discovered a soggy photograph
   on the mildewed carpet in her tiny room.
   She peered at the blurry faces and tried to remember
   going to Egypt. Wondered who the man could be,
   standing beside her at the Sphinx.
   THE RAFT
   He baits the hook with an Indian Paintbrush petal,
   lets out the line, reels, traps it with his thumb pad.
   October. Powder on the peaks. We float on a raft
   lashed together with a loose weave of duct tape and rope.
   I paddle us forward with a cottonwood branch,
   my leg in the water for a rudder, trying to hold us close
   to the darkness of the drop-off where the trout go
   to stay cool in the afternoons. Later we’ll make a fire
   and cook our catch with blueberries gathered frozen
   from the cirque above the tarn. We’ll blow on the coals.
   We’ll check for tenderness. We’ll add ash in place
   of salt. But for now I’m watching the sunlight
   bounce off the surface and shimmer in the shadow
   under my brother’s hat. The way he plays the line.
   The way he lets it troll behind us. The way the trout
   cloud our wake and flick their rainbowed sides.
   I’m torquing my leg underwater. I’m turning us back
   toward the darkness we’ve drifted away from.
   COUSIN JOSH ON FAMILY
   Fargo, North Dakota
   You ever had some loose screw try to tell you
   your friends is the family you choose?
   Well I wouldn’t bottle the breath of the minister
   that delivered the message. The family you got
   is the only family you’re gonna get,
   take it or leave it. Wanna know what I got?
   I got myself sisters. Two of em. But that’s all I got
   
 
 The Low Passions Page 2