Latest Update: crucible (2024-12-17)
I lose myself in the woods alone,
following my hypnotic steps. Heavy
thoughts unwind to a fork in the trail,
and I go left, heart racing uphill,
penny taste in mouth. I wonder
if I can leave myself, leave
nothing behind except a fading imprint,
old tire tracks pressed into dirt.
An accelerating urge overwhelms me.
I pick up a rock and feel its cold weight,
reel back and throw and it strikes a tree
and beautiful bark chunks fly.
I throw another and another, not quenching
the animal urge rising. I move
on instinct, grabbing a stick and swinging
at random branches. Its soft whooshing
slices air and brings congested emotions bursting
to the surface. It breaks,
and I toss the pieces away from my trembling hands.
I stop to stare at a stream. No idea how long.
There is silence except, above me in the trees,
the scraping of doomed leaves refusing to fall.
What happened before the walk, before I was here?
Nothing but gaping grey fog. This lacuna
of memory must have meaning. My mind is going
over the edge of something; I feel it.
My phone rings, and I toss it against sharp rocks.
Shattered fragments of plastic and metal
reflect the sun then drift away
on the unrelenting current. I turn
my back on the stream and hear a hoarse
cawing in a nearby ravine. I peer
down into the dip and see a crow
perched on the skull of a small animal
like a fox or a fawn freshly dead.
Its beak pierces the flesh of the neck
to excavate the meat that remains.
We lock eyes. It wants to tell me something.
It spreads its giant wings and rises.
I am compelled to follow, committed, running up.
I keep my gaze locked on the bird
until I skid to a stop at the edge
of a sheer rock face,
and dust continues my journey, floating
into the aqua-blue abyss of a quarry,
lake rippling hundreds of feet below.
Another impulse seizes and keys and wallet fly
Bills flutter out like injured butterflies.
The crow caws three sharp enthusiastic bursts
that shock me so I nearly tilt over the edge.
It sits on the post of an old fence watching.
I pace, part of my mind screaming to stop
- gone too far could find someone get help -
but these bursts of ecstatic release
cannot be ignored. I must do the unconscionable
to silence conscience. I must break reality
and become real.
Under the crow's perch, I spot
a rusty fragment of barbed wire lying
in the dirt waiting for me.
I approach and the bird points down with its beak.
I nod and take the wire and jab it
into the palm of my left hand and yank,
and a thick diagonal line fills
with blood unreasonably dark and warm,
and I drop the wire and stare,
expecting a jolt of pain, but instead,
a crippling wave of euphoria
brings me to my knees.
The crow hops and croaks and rattles, and I feel
excruciatingly alive.
I wrap my shirt around my hand, shouting
joyful expletives at the clouds.
I must have more.
This is the way; I've found it. Better
to lose an eye than for my whole body
to rot in hell. This makes perfect sense
here in the sticky region between.
So I take a deep breath and jam
my finger into my eye socket.
Tight at first, warm optical fluid
trickles down my arm as I push,
hook behind, and break through a barrier
then pull hard, fighting darkness.
It protrudes and I brace for the final rip
then see blood dripping onto my trembling hand,
which holds the jelly-like eye.
Before I can think, a black blur swoops
and my hand is empty, and with my left eye
I watch the thief carry my right over the quarry
and drop it into the water,
a tiny white globe bobbing in a sea of blue.
I exhale, cough, swaying. I know now
what the crow is trying to tell me.
I know it stronger than anything else.
This is not my body, not my reality.
I am somewhere else, something else, something
more. And in response to this thought,
all the colors of the world
bloom with vibrance, and sweet adrenaline
embraces me, and three words throb
in my head like a drumbeat.
I am awake,
echoing across the quarry.
I am awake!
There is power and promise in this voice.
My feathered savior circles and hooks
its claws into my shoulder,
vocalizing to the rhythm:
I am awake!
I see a jagged incisor cliff
jutting over the lake and I stagger
out onto the tip. The crow
knows what I must do. She whispers
it into my ear, and I obe.
Weak but not hurt, I lean
forward and laugh as I plunge.
And just before impact,
the water transforms.