Harvest

All week long, the rain piles up dark

behind the mountains, showing itself

to us in fits and starts over the ridge

like an army waiting to invade, bolder

and bolder as reinforcements arrive

to bolster it from behind. We work

from dark to dark. Even in sleep

grain slips like water through my fingers,

pours out the corners of the pouch

I try to make from my skirt, the ache

of my back rolls into dream as thunder’s

low groan.

It is night

when we finish. Lentils and grain

bulge in their sacks, for once enough

that word passes through the field

like a waterskin hand to hand, loosens

our breath, our shoulders, unknots

faces that for days on end have twisted

with work and worry, hurry and work.

We gather at the cookfire set up

in the low field. I sit on one side,

Rachel and Jacob on the other, leaning

into each other like those sacks of grain.

The rest of the household settles around,

children hiding at the edges,

jumping out to scare each other

in the dark.

Except for Judah,

my Judah, six now and old enough

this year to help—so important,

so serious he was, carrying empty sacks

to us in the fields. His hard work

done now, he trails a stick in the dust

around and around the fire, singing

his own small song about fields

and beans and dirty knees. When he thinks

to look up, he sees me, his father,

Rachel, his grandmother, all eyes

on him—my beautiful,

beautiful boy—holding him there

at the center, by the fire that softens

even the hard pebbles of lentils

and makes them possible,

softens even the hard shell

of Rachel’s eyes, that inner lid that closes

when my children come near, as though

to see them were to see a horror,

a shape of emptiness she could

never fill.

But tonight, Judah circles

and he sees that we see him, we hold him

there in the warm, lit place, and his song begins

to grow, begins to spin out from the fire

like a swirl of sparks up into the dark, so unafraid

his joy in the moment I fear I will have to

look away.

He stops,

shining, in front of me and I catch

my breath, he is about to speak, oh,

what can be the words for such

as this?

Mother,

— he says, and I see

only the knot of his two hands

holding each other so tightly

over his heart that his whole

small body tenses and shakes—

I am right here.