Wolf Lake Poem by Elizabeth Bachinsky

Wolf Lake

Rating: 3.3


It was down that road he brought me, still
in the trunk of his car. I won't say it felt right,
but it did feel expected. The way you know
your blood can spring like a hydrant.
That September, the horseflies were murder
in the valley. I'd come home to visit the family,
get in a couple of weeks of free food, hooked up
with a guy I'd known when I was a kid and things
went bad. When he cut me, I remember
looking down, my blood surprising as paper
snakes leaping from a tin. He danced me
around his basement apartment, dumped me
on the chesterfield, sat down beside me, and lit
a smoke. He seemed a black bear in the gloam,
shoulders rounded under his clothes,
so I tried to remember everything I knew
about black bears: whistle while you walk… carry bells…
if you don't bother them, they won't bother you…
play dead. Everything slowed. I'll tell you a secret.
It's hard to kill a girl. You've got to cut her bad
and you've got to cut her right, and the boy had done neither,
Pain rose along the side of my body, like light.
I lay very still while he smoked beside me: this boy
I'd camped with every summer since we were twelve,
the lake so quiet you could hear the sound
of a heron skim the water at dusk, or the sound
of a boy's breathing. I came-to in the trunk of his car,
gravel kicking up against the frame, dust coming in
through the cracks. It was dark. I was thirsty.
I couldn't move my hands or legs,
The pain was still around. I think I was tied.
We drove that way for a long time before
the Chrysler finally slowed, then stopped. Sound
of gravel crunching under tires. I could smell the lake,
a place where, as kids, we'd come to swim
and know we'd never be seen. Logs grew
up from that lakebed. All those black bones
rising from black water. I remember,
we'd always smelled of lake water and of sex
by the end of the day, and there was a tape of Patsy
Cline we always liked to sing to on our way out —
which is what I thought we'd be doing that September
afternoon. That, or smoking up in his garage.

You know, you hear about the Body
all the time: They found the Body…
the Body was found… and then you are one.
Someone once told me the place had been
a valley, before the dam, before the town.
But that was a long time ago. When the engine stopped,
I heard the silver sound of keys in the lock
and then I was up on his shoulders, tasting blood.
I think he said my name. I think he walked
toward the woods.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Dutendra Chamling 17 August 2016

wonderful poem, indeed.

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