Hard to tell one creature from another. (Foundling Review) |
Another Badger, More or Less My family laughs, when they don't cringe, at my obstinate inability to tell apart the myriad forest animals who creep, crawl and rustle through the nearby woods. No naturalist, I refer to each and every furry creature as Badger, as if God had not distinguished their delicate paws. Black badgers with a white stripe waddling past, ring-tailed badgers down by the stream with their lightning quick grasp, and even floppy-eared badgers who brazenly nibble on my carrots. Yet, for all my family's embarrassment, elbow jabs, suppressed giggles and smirks, I am not alone. As the shadows stretch, yawn and flow together to form sleepy pools of liquid darkness, the rushing headlights of some harried businessman or nervous, philandering, damn-I'm-so-late spouse careen through the puddles. Beams of light spray into frightened, drowning eyes, and leave again, leave some smeared and crumpled carcass in their wake, unidentified and uncared for in the dissipating ripples of light. As the pungent odor drifts into the well-tended yards, setting the dogs to baying and howling at the freshly impotent scent, or as the rings merge on the shattered tail, smudged together by blood and jumbled viscera, or as the once-floppy ears lie limp and torn, who is to say which is a badger, more or less? Differentiated features blur in the anonymous carnage, and soon wind and rain will begin their inevitable scouring. A few days, a week, perhaps two, and none is any the wiser about what lay there in grim, unwanted slumber. And after last night, after the screech and keening wail of tortured brakes across the unforgiving asphalt, after your beloved cherry-red Honda Civic failed to negotiate the sharp curve atop Applegate Hill, what more are you? * Was published by the Foundling Review in 2016. |