She grasps her white orb egg sac
and runs for the cover of the rocks.
She has a brood, unlike me.
I envy her, resting in naturalness,
a kind of being I do not know.
I find her sisters hanging on to their own egg sacs
inside a nest of warm stones.
They hunker lower into the corners.
I am torn between rescue and the work I must do.
I say, I am sorry.
I am human, I can’t just let things be.
I prepare for the extension of the human house.
As long as I can, I will avoid the places with the spider moms.
I hope, under cover of night, they might move to safer ground.
I scratch at my ankle.
She says, I am sorry.
I am a spider, I had to bite.