by Michael Medler
She lies,
lumpish and still
where the heron killed her,
entangled in her own entrails,
beyond swallow size.
Her sallow scales glint
in angular morning light. One
eye might catch the quick
of clouds, the other gazing
down where she left eggs
for spring. She gapes,
wavers in ripples, torn
where water falls, coasting
in sublime ugliness. Not
even food for the bird;
just kill. Just where her time
let her lie. Just there.
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