we shucked our corn in a field of sun like farmers before the feast. their husks of green covered the ears to keep them deaf and dumb, to keep them unaware, of the violence they would succumb. moist with dirt, smelling sweet, our hands became the tools of poor mid-western violence. we stripped their bodies bare, clean of rotting silk, that fell between our toes. butter and salt, on a table of barn wood, that splinters to rough touch, in a freshly mowed yard, filled with light of summer dusk, when the ground begins to cool the air, where the bugs illuminate the night. there were no screams but laughter could be heard.