Rhinoceros
At sunrise, the morning after the party,
I hear our white rhinoceros
Stumbling through the rosemary bed.
Hoary lawn. Light pissing in
Over the eastern rooftops.
From my bed on the second floor,
I hear the familiar fizz of the poachers’ tires.
Same Toyota, tightening its circles.
There’s a square of green lawn
In my backyard the size of two bodies.
It’s the only patch I still water.
Good for lying back to look up at the overcast sky
Lit white by the city.
Our rhinoceros sniffs in the low grass
For some old smoldering
Gone cold a long time now.
His dreams rush over the arctic surfaces
Behind the bones of his skull, behind his eyes.
He hardly fits in my front yard.
You can’t call it cruelty
Because he chooses to stay.
Still, I know he’s just too lonely to go.
When he was smaller,
He’d stomp at the feet of smokers
Over for a beer or barbeque.
Now he can’t be allowed near the guests.
He’s drawn masochistically to fires.
He must weigh five thousand pounds.
The moment I saw him
I knew he wouldn’t last in the city.
But he stayed—below my kitchen window,
Thumping heavily through the garden,
Observing all the bits of eyes and skin.
He was watching us that night
Through the tangle of chain link
And butternut squash vines
When you kissed the white underbelly of my right forearm.
He knows about grazing,
About taking what comes, and how to go on living
Despite the value of his death.
I know about the tangled shape your hair takes
After all the pins and clips come out.
I know that you cry for your husband sometimes.
In the evenings, when I know it’s worst for him,
I take his face in my hands—
Buttock-sized jowls, bottle-sized olfactory passages full of my scent,
Hair sprouting from his ears as they flick
And listen in different directions.
It’s a wonder he keeps all the sounds
Straight in his head,
Their sources and meanings.
My cheek touches his horns
And he knows that I love him,
But it only makes him sadder—
That he can’t make me any happier,
Or any less lonely,
That I can do neither for him.
I know that you plan to leave this city,
And it may not matter whether or not I water
That square of lawn. But I remember
The white gasp of your neck
The first time I heard my fingers touching it,
Our rhinoceros watching us through the fence
As buds turned sharp and burst.
Forgive me.
I wasn’t really listening.