I am a boy again, in the
backseat of the car after church, going home.
Sadly for others, window
glass has nowhere near the power needed
to ward off the fallen
world outside—corrupted by sin,
the Sunday school teacher
said, done in once and for all by
a woman’s flesh and a
man’s hungry eye.
The car picks up speed and
radio words
tumble and bounce off the
floorboards
at my feet like empty beer
cans.
Past my reflection and
through the blur,
I can see for myself—the
world still stands upright,
good as it ever was, and
is littered with talismans
tirelessly telling and
retelling the first story,
the old, old one made of light:
snakeskins dangling from
tree limbs;
dry creek beds and flash
floods of mountain memory;
sparrow skulls like Easter
eggs filled with leafy green shadow;
the wetness of new mice in
hay fields, an avalanche of flesh and eye together;
the testimony of bullfrogs
after rain: “We live! We live!”
sky rivers of ravens at
sunset
fireflies, oh, the
fireflies moving freely between worlds, weightless.
“Like this,” they say
again and again. “See how easy!”
and a boy, the one
talisman meant to gather the rest
in a cardboard cigar box
with feathered corners
and a rubber band wrapped tight
against accidental forgetfulness.
A keeper of faith.