The sparrow is an opened book, an angel
parted down the breast, head turned to the side
so one black eye can search the stippled sky
in ecstasy as the magpie straddles and works
the body over with famished care. I sit
beneath the silver olive and watch, rub
a single fruit between my thumb and forefinger
until it slips its furred skin, until the dark pit
rolls there. No pool of blood, just her shit-stuck feathers
and a cloud of aspen leaves painted with drought’s
dusty watercolor scar. When he finds the heart,
the magpie tucks it down his throat, a jewel
hidden in haste before the border’s crossing.
Yes, the world has always been this fragile,
he says as he lifts her by the ribcage
and carries her off to where I cannot see.
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