Called out of dream by the pitch and screech,

I awoke to see my mother’s hair

set free of its pincurls, springing out

into the still and hurtling air

above the front seat and just as suddenly gone.

The space around us twisted,

and in the instant before the crash

I heard the bubbling of the chickens,

the homely racket they make at all speeds,

signifying calm, resignation, oblivion.

And I listened. All through the slash

and clatter, the rake of steel, shatter of glass,

I listened, and what came

was a blizzard moan in the wind, a wail

of wreckage, severed hoses and lives,

a storm of loose feathers, and in the final

whirl approximating calm, the cluck

and fracas of the birds. I crawled

on hands and knees where a window should

have been and rose uneven

in November dusk. Wind blew

a snow of down, and rows of it quivered along

the shoulder. One thin stream of blood

oozed, flocked in feathers.

This was in the Ozarks, on a road curving miles

around Missouri, and as far as I could

see, no light flickered through the timber,

no mail box leaned the flag

of itself toward pavement, no cars

seemed ever likely to come along.