Crickets are stitching the afternoon together. What the squalling catbird rends, crickets relentlessly repair. The maple shivers, sends yellowed messages sailing down. Too much has ripped: half the main branch cracked off and hangs, teetering, across lower boughs leaving, on the trunk, a blond wound. We cross the brook on stepping stones and climb west up the mountain flank through laurel thickets, along the scooped-out valley of beeches, up the stream bed to sit on a fallen tree. But there’s no rest. We carry with us what we left below—a country clawing its very idea to shreds. The scarlet boletus mushroom prongs from decaying wood. In its bishop’s amaranth skull cap, it stands its ground. One kind will nourish; the other sickens. But not, like the white amanita, bringing on liver failure, seizures, death. |
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