Spending the Night
Rachael Z. Ikins
I grind gravel on adrenaline’s wave. One burst
catapults me 120 miles, as if I held my breath, 120 miles.
I exhale my face into scrub-grass up my nostrils
green my fingers earth under the nails
grit between my teeth taste Mother Gaia,
yes, and prostrate
on her chest ear to her heartbeat:
cardinals’ scarlet cheer-cheer, redwings’ booker-T!
warm wrens’ chortle, downy-brown, reminiscent of your eyes.
Yes, I cry out! for her, for you…answers float.
Four creaking herons’ sinuous necks
scribe a story of night’s slow fall
across the sky above my head.
Sisterhoods of crows shout hurry! over velvet shoulders.
Lone cicada’s voice climbs the clouds.
Kiss-kiss- grasshoppers
bounce through milkweeds’ dense curl.
Skipper wings’ copper petals brush at
lingering crumbs of day.
Yellow and black striped
swallow-tails fold like hands in prayer
Robins chat. Woodpeckers code.
Coyote laughter. Foxes’ dance.
Forest secrets deciphered.
My wilderness. I decide
my way home.