I can’t help but mourn the frogs, flattened like Wile E. Coyote after the inevitable boulder plummets from a great height, leaving him mashed on the pavement while the Roadrunner speeds off - vroom, vroom, beep, beep.
I try to steer around them, but they blanket the road in biblical numbers during the rain and it’s like some impossible video game weaving through masses of randomly hopping life a certain amount of death is unavoidable.
When I walk the road I can’t stop counting one, two, five, ten, twenty cartoon-flat bodies littering the pavement where I extinguished their glittering copper and golden-green existence.
Last night, on the panes of every lit window frogs of all sizes and colors gathered outside, they covered doors, watering cans even lined up single file on the coiled garden hose like they were climbing the ladder to frog heaven.
Through the glass, I admired their rhythmic throats and soft, creamy, underbellies one, two, five, ten, twenty fragile creatures seeking warmth in the hastening darkness.