Charles is in the twilight heat
Where summer rubs
Like tectonic plates on skin.
He tells me stories
Of shooting people in Vietnam
During the war.
–
The rifle he used is under his bed.
I saw it once when he asked me
To feed his cat Molly while on vacation.
He took his wife to Canada
To watch the caribou, migrate.
–
It’s such a plain rifle, worn.
Wood stain nearly rubbed off.
Barrel dull, black and textured.
He drives hundreds of miles
To watch the caribou.
–
Through his kitchen window
He mentions how hot it is.
The sun is an orange throb.
He tells me how he used to hunt
in southeast Oregon, Steens Mountain
Hauled back all the animal
Limb by limb, organ by organ
Buckets of blood and fat.
–
I don’t like it when the morning sun is hazy
Before the heat proves
It can take the night.
Charles throws seeds to blue jay parents.
They’re always uptight, worried.
Especially if Molly chews grass near them.
A grey squirrel gnaws on antlers
Nailed to a tree in his backyard.
The antlers are decades old.
–
The goal in Vietnam, he said, was to maim not kill.
It ties up resources, beds, hospitals
Doctors, systems, and puts stress on a country.
Killing just needs a burial or a burn.
–
He’s in a wheelchair now.
Sits in front of a television, volume turned up.
Still feeds the blue jays.
The seed is stolen by crows.
A bus picks him up once a week
To visit the VA hospital
Treating him for dementia and heart disease.
Talks about how he watches the caribou.
Molly doesn’t seem to notice.

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