AFTER THE SQUALL

In need of air, she unhinged every

window, revolving ones downstairs,

upstairs skylights, mid-floor French doors,

swept into the house the salt-brine,

the cricket chirp, the osprey whistle,

the sea-current, sound of the Sound,

but had not noticed the basement

bedroom window shielded by blinds,

screen-less. Later that night when they

returned home, lights illuminating

the downstairs hall, insects inhabited

the ground floor rooms. She carried handfuls

of creatures across a River Styx—

the katydids perched on lampshades,

beach tiger beetles shuttling across

floorboards, nursery web spiders splotching

the ceiling—trying to put back

the wild fury she had released.