Iowa &
Other Accidents
There was snow that afternoon covering the road
which twisted toward the secret
of water, the mysterious surgeof sludge & loam, the living
Mississippi, unlike the rest of the Midwest,drawing itself through landscape. There was an appointment
you were keepingin Moline: a cheap hotel, booze, a little blow. On the Lower
East Side, a womanspills her martini, makes a gesture
like erasure, or regret. It was almost Christmas.
In the rear viewsuddenly, the car you will always describe as oncoming
must have slipped into a skidand now, rising up over the bank,
it startles you --- that reflection. In Molinethe maid corners the bed, straightens the clean
line of sheet. Almost Christmas. On the road,
swirls of snow. On the roadthe car hovering behind you, a witness,
unfortunate & so unlike the audience permitted
the distance of fictions, the artificeof plot. And worse, of course, the law
of cause & effect: I looked up,
it started to fall. You must attachsubject to verb, must say
I saw, and did, in your rear view, the car you'd thought
nothing of,the gray sedan lifting slowly from the common snow,
turning, and the accident
always there, about to happen.
--- ©2011 Kate Northrop
Clean: Poems