Poem

An Old Enemy

/ /

Just past midnight when I walked out back to piss in the yard

I saw at my feet
in a patch of moonlight

the old enemy coiled on the root of a cherry tree.

It didn’t rattle or move, and I thought it might be dead,
then the fat tail twitched
as a slight wind washed the root with shadows.

I backed away slowly, looking for the shovel
I kept leaning against the fence.

It wasn’t there.  So thinking omen, I left the snake
and walked back into the house.

This morning I saw my mistake.  A rope the tree trimmers
left last week
lay draped across the root of the cherry.

Omen?  Maybe.  But no mistake.

In deep memory the danger remains –
the fat rope
coiled and ready to strike.