Ocean Vuong
The Smallest Measure
Behind the fallen oak
the Winchester rattles
in a boy's early hands.
A copper beard grazes
his ear. Go ahead.
She's all yours...
Heavy with summer, I
am the doe whose one hoof cocks
like a question ready to open
roots. & like any god
-forsaken thing, I want nothing more
than my breaths. To lift
this snout, carved
from centuries of hunger toward the next
low peach bruising
in the season's clutch.
Go ahead , the voice thicker
now, drive her
home. But the boy is crying
into the carcass of a tree -- cheeks smeared
with snot & chipped bark.
Once, I came near
enough to a man to smell
a woman's scent
in his quiet praying--
as some will do before raising
their weapons closer
to the sky. But through the grained mist
that makes this morning's minutes,
this smallest measure
of distance, I see two arms unhinging
the rifle from the boy's grip,
its metallic shine
sharpened through wet leaves
I see the rifle...the rifle coming
down, then gone. I see
an orange cap touching
an orange cap. No, a man
bending over his son
the way the hunted
for centuries must bend
over its own reflection
to drink.