Mr. Crow
Short, squat and solid,
a businessman in black,
he struts across our property
like he just bought it,
to the waterfalls
to dunk the bagel
or bangles he stole
from the table, floor
or dumpster
at the sidewalk café.
Then he inspects
the seeds – sunflower,
pumpkin, watermelon,
cantaloupe - we discard
and buries them
in the fertile soil.
Some sprout into green
vines and plants
that survive until the cows
or wildlife eat them
long after Mr. Crow
flies away to never return.
Tis the Season
Going outside. Got to get the
roof fixed
before the monsoons, my husband says
as I sit at the computer answering emails.
I feel something soft moving
under my bare feet and scramble
on unsteady legs, knee screaming.
A two-inch creature crawls towards me.
as I squint through eighty-year-old eyes.
Is it a tarantula, scorpion, or another
desert creature escaping the hot sun?
The saw screeches from the sun porch.
I stare out the sliding glass door
as my husband climbs the ladder to the roof.
The creature follows me as hanging
onto the bedpost I head for the shoe
pile next to the nightstand so I can
walk outside and call to him.
As I pick up the only shoe that fits
my swollen foot, I turn and a tiny mouse
stares up at me. My heart lurches
and I drop the shoe. Where’s your mother?
I ask the trembling creature at my feet.
I find a cup on the nightstand
and place it in front of the mouse
which freezes and stands and stares.
I shut the door and collapse on the couch
until my husband appears. Are you okay?
There’s a baby mouse in the
bedroom, I say.
We’ve got to find the mother. My husband
opens the door, scoots the mouse into the cup
and as he heads out, says. I just released
a big mouse outside this
morning.
I glance over at the window to see a lizard
plastered to the glass staring outside
where the baby mouse runs to his mother.
Tis the summer season, I say, laughing.
Sharon Waller Knutson
is a retired journalist who lives in Arizona. She has published several poetry
books including My Grandmother Smokes Chesterfields (Flutter Press
2014,) What the Clairvoyant Doesn’t Say and Trials & Tribulations of
Sports Bob (Kelsay Books 2021) and Survivors, Saints and Sinners (Cyberwit
2022.) Her work has also appeared recently in GAS Poetry, Art and
Music, The Rye Whiskey Review, Black Coffee Review, Terror House
Review, Trouvaille Review, ONE ART, Mad Swirl, The Drabble,
Gleam, Spillwords, Muddy River Review, Verse-Virtual, Your Daily Poem,
Red Eft Review and The Five-Two.
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