Garden of Earthly Delights
Chain link rattle, a line of boys jerk
the dugout fence. Delicate fingers
turn beastly, like talons, mouths
buckling into barbarous
howls. Their parents applaud
from the bleachers. Under care
of a sitter, cover of the occasional clink
of pint-sized bat to ball, my sister and I
slip away with the rest, convent
of bored girls drifting toward
a blemish of undergrowth flourishing
along the creek. We summit to decide
our roles for play. A mother, busy
with mud pies, I barely notice
when a real man enters
our ephemeral home. The other girls
follow some resonant command, return
to bleachers, wiping dirt
from their hands. My sister embarks
on her fatherly duty, a distant thicket,
the promise of a palmful
of berries. The man and I
assess each other. He is tall, pleased
in gray sweats. I am caked
in red dust, kneeling by the creek.
I imagine this is what he saw, though
I am young and memory
is a slippery thing, a crawfish
discovered under a disturbed
rock, then veiled by kicked-up silt.
I was a flash of something
edible. He was a damp hand
holding the stone.