Cactus Wren
The brown backed
white bellied bird
chirps like the smoke
detector as flames
dance in the fireplace,
frantically flying back
and forth from the counters
to the cabinets to the windowsills.
Most likely a sister or brother
of the cholla dweller who
tours the kitchen two weeks
ago as my husband hauls
in groceries from the Cadillac.
Could be a cousin to the cactus wren
we find perched on the ice cream cone
cookie jar in the dining room a decade ago.
Or an ancestor of Charley who scolds my husband
for building a house in his habitat two decades ago.
The current visitor swoops over my head
and disappears into the dark living room.
We go about our business until we hear
a screeching SOS call and the flapping of wings
and open the door and the bird follows the light
and disappears down the dirt driveway.
We breathe a sigh of relief until five days
later, I hear chirping again and find another
cactus wren flying through the house
and then every morning we hear chirping
and flapping, until we find
a missing vent on the side of the house
and a nest in the attic where the wrens
are hopping down into the house
like tenants exploring hidden rooms.
Buzzard
She
struts across
the
lush green lawn
like
an old woman
in
a black raincoat,
face
and neck flushed red
as
if she had just downed
a
bottle of Burgundy
at
the corner bar
where
she had sloshed
a
drop of wine on her leg
and
had abandoned
her
umbrella and galoshes.
Gila
Monster
A
cross between a dinosaur
and
a crocodile, the pink
and
black scaled reptile
slowly
drags its heavy two
foot
long body across
the
gravel road half a mile
from
where I hike. What’s
that? I think and run
in
its direction. Camera
in
one hand, water bottle
in
the other, I catch up
with
the curious creature
in
a clearing along the road.
As
I snap photo after photo,
it
stares and squints
as
the flash hits its eyes
and
then plods towards
me,
forked tongue
flickering,
dark eyes
shooting
bullets but still
I
don’t stop snapping photos
until
I take a selfie
and hear it grunting in my ear..
I
run home panting
and
when the photo
pops
up on Google,
I
realize I was up close
and
personal with an angry
Gila
Monster with a grudge.
Once they bite, their massive
jaws won’t let go without
intervention, Wikipedia says.
Their saliva is venomous.
I
envision what might have
happened
had I not
had
the brains to run.
I
plan on patting the cute
little
creature on the head,
but
he latches onto my leg
and
I feel excruciating pain.
And
hobble down the road,
where
there is no traffic,
dragging
a heavy weight.
I
collapse and hours later
my
husband driving home
from
work finds me
in
a ditch along the road
shackled
to a Gila Monster
like
escaped convicts, foaming
at
the mouth or worse.
After
the Cat Dies
What
I need is a kitten,
my
friend from Idaho
says
on the cell phone.
Since
we live
in
the Arizona desert
she
suggests maybe
someone
will drop
a
litter off
in
our front yard.
I don’t
have time to
explain
to her why
that
is a bad idea
because
I see a coyote
sniffing
the ground
as
he follows a trail
behind
the waterfalls
where
my son stands
puffing
on a Marlboro.
And
I don’t see Taco,
his
bite sized
Chihuahua.
Just
then I hear a yip
and
a scratch on the door
as
the coyote slinks away
as
disappointed as hungry
truck
drivers finding
all
the cafes closed down.
Abandoned
The tourists find the newborn calf
still wet from birth,
trying to stand on wobbly legs
beside the road out in the middle
of the Arizona desert and rescue her
and drop her off at the fire station.
My husband volunteers to reunite
the calf with her mother and hauls
the bawling baby back to the desert.
Up the road, he spots the mother,
a red heifer with milk sacks
slapping against her side, as she runs
with a couple of yearlings
like a teenage mother too young
to be saddled with a nursing infant.
He fails to catch up with her
and she disappears into the mountains.
By then the sun is setting
and the coyote pack is prowling
the yard hunting for fresh meat.
We take the calf in the house
where she sleeps in the foyer
until the rancher shows up
to take her to her mother.
Sharon Waller Knutson is a retired journalist
who lives in Arizona. She has published nine 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 and Kiddos & Mamas Do the
Darndest Things (Cyberwit 2022.) Her work has also appeared recently in Discretionary
Love, Impspired, GAS Poetry, Art and Music, The Rye Whiskey Review, Black
Coffee Review, Lothlorien Review, Silver Birch Press,, 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.
Love these! Feel a real kinship with the old buzzard woman!!
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