Wildlife Management II

I woke from a bird hitting the window, almost, I thought, hard
enough to break it.
                                   The sun rose knowingly.
                                                                                 I slid the sash up and
stuck my head out like someone in an Italian movie.
                                                                                                 A flicker lay
on its back—stunned—but it was blinking steady as a railroad
crossing.
                 Was there misery to put out?
                                                                      Would it come to its
"senses"?
                  I thought where were you when bark beetles killed half
my trees?
                 Then I remembered, sleepily, reading that flickers mostly
eat ants.
                I went back to sleep for half an hour, and dreamed, as I
often do, of horses.
                                   When next I looked, the bird still lay still, still
blinking.
                Maybe, I thought, it can't roll over.
                                                                                So I went down and
rolled it over.
                         Terrified by my touch, it came to life and flop-
hopped down the hill into some sagebrush.
                                                                               It didn't fly, but it
didn't seem broken, either.
                                                  I tried to find it later.
                                                                                          No luck.
                                                                                                          Whether
it lived and flew off, or died thrust into a bush, was, apparently,
none of my business.
                                       If it were thrust into a bush, I knew the ants
wouldn't wait for the guest of honor to start dinner.
 

Copyright Credit: James Galvin, "Wildlife Management II" from Everything We Always Knew Was True. Copyright © 2016 by James Galvin.  Reprinted by permission of Copper Canyon Press, www.coppercanyonpress.org.
 
Source: Everything We Always Knew Was True (2016)