I Among ten thousand trees, the transformation begins with the blink of a snowbird.
II Snowbirds live. Snowbirds die. Wing tips span the seam between egg and bone.
III I baked my snowbird in a pie; the oven wanted something beautiful to eat.
IV A nest is a clever home. At night, house windows shine like yellow puzzles for the snowbird to solve.
V I steal the notes of the snowbird’s song, shackle myself to the silence that blooms between the notes.
VI Abandoned women in thrift store robes, abandoned houses warmed by bedroom fires— the snowbird understands.
VII The mouth of a snowbird is small but mellifluous.
VIII Children with dusty fingers color sidewalks with chalk. Snowbirds alight there and dip their wings into an apocalyptic sun.
IX When the snowbird departs, the branches of the juniper languish like bitter crescents of lime, ice cubes melting in a glass of gin.
X To decipher snowy syntax, etch lines on a sheet of ice; get on all fours and trace snowbird tracks in snow.
XI Rain is turning to sleet. The snowbird is awake.
XII She crosses her legs on the velvet settee, exhaling cigarette smoke in rings across the room. The ashtray is a crystal grave of severed snowbird beaks.
XIII It was winter all afternoon. Across the city, chimneys are spilling snow into the sky. A snowbird shivers in the fireplace. I close my eyes and gather kindling.