Allison Huang McFadden
Jubilee
I.
In April, in our time of waiting,
you beckon me to a forlorn
land in the Northeast corner
of the world we know.
When we arrive, saplings claw
the belly of the car, worry
away rust-eaten metal. I wince
at each snap, each chalky shriek.
We dismount into crabgrass
as tall as our knees,
a roadside kraken engorged
on green plastic bottles and
potato chip sleeves. I snag
on cellulose
tentacles, on saplings
sinking metacarpals into
the backs of my knees.
As we wade deeper,
the undergrowth disintegrates
into mustering,
aging rain. Moss-eaten pines
lob elbows at our
occipitals, take scalpels
to our eyes. We squint
and blink.
Just a little farther,
you say. But we are
straightjacketed by myriads of a weed.
The legion of them sneak raw-
boned wrists around our ankles
in tepid embrace. I
claw. Prickle-naped,
freckle-faced
yellow leaves plaster
the backs of my
hands, hungry
for skin. You,
in quiet glee, say–
Look,
you can see
where the deer have bedded
where the tangle-brush
has sunken in–
They must stalk with
hooves incisive.
So I try it again.
My boot, too oafish
to find the space
between coils
lurches my body
onto fours, yet
these river weeds interlock
in little rafts to buoy me
up from marshy ground, they become
interlocked hands carrying
a weary fawn,
the premonition
of spring.
II.
We find ourselves
at the edge of a creek.
We’ll plant them here, you say,
where the bank erodes
fast. You lower sacks
from your shoulder– four twiggy
masts beached in bags, soon
to hold up in the path
of a crashing beast.
You hand me a spade.
The bugs form
a tacky entourage at my neck
and when I swipe I leave
crumbs on my chin, I am
a golem garbed
in dead damselfly skin.
That’s it, you say
as I pack in number four, a flagstaff
with no fabric
or fealty, just blood-tipped buds like
points of swords.
III.
Sweat-stained and sun-dizzied
I swoon up to a stout cedar hedge
rest my head in its sling
see the knot of its belly button
ooze an oily
resin tear.
I am still there when
a ground beetle
stumbles into the pus,
scrabbling feet
like oars. I could
thumb it to safety
but it stills.
So when it stirs again,
moistens its antennae
with nervous feet,
I still my breath
so as not to bury what I witness
in the clamor of my blink—
it parts its scarab shell
rattles its wings
and lifts off,
soars
—to not miss this
sublunary rebirth, this
resurrection
kind of thing.
Allison (Huang) McFadden was recently published in
Ekstasis and
Clayjar Review. She is a law student.