Deer Tracks
A Poem by Alexis Ragan
Quiet: If you hold your breath from beating,
there’s a panting in the woods.
How long has the herd yearned for quenching
more than antlers and hooves? We’re just as
parched as the doe dry with sorrow, using mist for
offspring drinks in between waves of mass migration.
Thirsty snouts scrape below the bush and weep:
“The World’s Gone Dry”
Until the fawn came back damp that day gauzed from
the spinney, dew dropped in the glassy ponds of her
footprints now hydrating the herd to pick up and move.
At this point it feels like we're following deer tracks.
They stopped, so they’re sleeping, so maybe we should
rest too. On a sheet of tough silk laid down from our
tears, the trunk of tears I gathered for us to sleep on,
the fabric feels dry, like a heaving throat roped in hot air,
I could have sworn it fell from my eyes already solidified.
There is one thing: an occasional gust likes to whisper light
down our spines in the times of precipitation, preaching:
In exile → float on → in exile → float on
And sometimes when the rain claps like a baby rattle
in the hand of a child who begins to think their mother
won’t return – fast and anarchic and fatally blue – fig
branches bend backwards, making arches that match
the curve in the back of a lady dancing all on her own.
A breeze brushed against my bare nape:
aqueous, silky, smooth, singing how
the well of sweet water waits near.
We followed the tracks to the top of the hill.
And never went thirsty again.