(or, The Menagerie pt. 2)
My early memories are few and far between
but I remember being tiny and excited
to gawk snakes and bugs and other critters
some lady brought to my pre-K class
to teach us about animals.
I think there was a fennec fox,
but mostly I was fascinated by the spindly-legged tarantulas,
and the giant yellow-and-white python that voided itself on my mom’s favorite shirt.
My dad spent my fourteenth summer
tidying the stoop of our front porch.
It wasn’t so bad but for a couple of spiders,
big-bellied and proliferate,
becoming a nuisance in need of eviction.
I watched Dad, fearless of the world as he so seemed,
and must have said something to offset him.
He plucked the nearest spider from its nest and tossed it at my face.
Eight years I was a Spider Slayer of the Most Fearful Order.
For my second half of college I moved to small-town Oregon
where the weather was wild and the creatures wilder.
I was reminded how to fall in love with the little things
with their unknowable thoughts and simple purposes,
and I, Spider Slayer, after for so long having frozen stiff against the eight-legged
finally melted to understand them as victims of a father’s poor choice, just like me.
Today I am Mother of Jumpers.
Clover and Sorrel admire each other from their separate homes,
friendly if not somewhat grumpy when bothered like the rest of us.
Ghost is a more difficult little guy, having disappeared
into the window for three days before reemerging like a certain well-worshipped-someone,
dusty, confused, and clutching to my finger like a newborn babe.
I collect their little molted hats in a cup as I watch them grow, careful not to let them disappear at a careless breath.
(Hour 8)