Émigré
by Zachary Daniel
I am pulling the sled deeper
into a country I was assured
was wholly free of antecedents.
Across the border the moon has built
its palaces of light and the birds, everywhere,
turn iron and plunge from the sky.
Bees float on in the absence of any nest.
Ants rummage through wallets
fallen open in the grass.
A stream is dragging its trout
backwards through its silvery gears.
Shadows scurry under the objects that cast them.
Every farmhouse is a paper cutout
behind which a single man
can be found sleeping at his post.
Weathervanes waggle in the unknown air.
A banker’s face turns red in the struggle
to pull his vault around in a bindle.
Even the stars in this country
prove unnameable, fastening
“Be Back Soon” signs in the open air.
When the townsfolk go to bed
they unzip a seam behind an ear
and hot air escapes from their flesh.
Rocks materialize into position,
cracking their knuckles.
The soil sits there surreptitiously.
By now I have ditched the sled
to crawl on hand and knee
into the tiny department store labeled “Heaven”.
Zachary Daniel works as a gardener in Cave Hill Cemetery. He lives with his wife and cat in Louisville, Kentucky. He has poems published or forthcoming at The Pierian, Eunoia Review, and elsewhere on the internet.