DOG AND MASTER

Consider the ermine—

territorial, noxious, thieving—

its dense fur whitening

when light is reduced.

Mesmerizing its victims

with a snake dance,

killing with a bite to

the back of the neck.

Born blind, deaf, and toothless,

the male is called a “dog,”

a roamer, a strayer,

a transient. But huddled

in my arms for warmth,

with my fingernails

stroking his underbelly,

he forgets his untamable

nature. His rounded

hips shiver like mine.

In folklore, he holds the soul

of a dead infant; and in life,

he prefers to give himself

up when hunted, rather

than soil himself. This is

civilization, I think, roughly

stroking his small ears.

But then, suddenly,

I’m chasing him around

the dining room screaming,

“No, I told you, no!” like two stupidly

loving, stupidly hating

creatures in a violent

marriage, or some weird

division of myself,

split off and abandoned

in order to live.