WHAT CONNECTION
CAN BE MADE—
V. Batyko
1 Dec 2022
Poetry
the first day of April, the sudden lack
of turtles at the lake, the sunken look
on my neighbor Paula’s face. I watched her
take down the wind chimes from her porch,
gently placing metal rods and bells
in her driveway garbage bin, and I recalled
the careful way my mother disposed of all the cat food—
spooning weeks of salmon pâté down the sink,
rinsing each metal tin before recycling—
when Saima died in the driveway.
She moved, Paula, silently, and I recalled
our conversation last night, how I said
I only want to see what’s right in front of me,
to watch Paula take down her wind chimes without recalling
white foam in the driveway
bubbling from a mouth
still pink with sound
on the first day of April. I walked to the lake
to see the turtles, watch them
poke their heads out from their hoods,
but when I arrived they were all gone.
I’d like to watch the lack of turtles
without recalling how I laughed, actually
laughed in the driveway,
thinking it must’ve been some sort of
April fool’s joke, some sort of sick
handiwork my brother pulled together with cotton balls,
Cool Whip, a stuffed animal;
how I couldn't stop laughing
even when, suddenly, the loss sunk in.
I returned home from the lake.
She was back
inside, Paula, and the wind chimes
hadn’t quite fit inside the dumpster.