*
Grace
On the last day of summer,
drifting slow as hope through
the thick air of evening
she chances into
the plume of CO2 from
my breath, follows it upstream
to my arm’s telltale heat.
She hovers, then slowly sinks
the last few inches straight
down into my pelt with all
her landing gear extended,
proboscis going into the skin even
as the slight craft of her body
still rides the hairs down,
her feet stretching one
by one down, down,
& I am here.
Lord, I am here.
She is beautiful & blameless
& I in a mood to share
the beer in my veins, watching
as her banded
abdomen turns dark, inflates.
A long minute later
she pulls out, rises unsteadily
& sails off singing
her single note.
Then comes a rapid patter across
the field, the yard, staccato
on the porch roof &
into the woods – suddenly
it’s pouring & the treetops
are bending, swaying under
the weight of it
before the first drops reach
the forest floor.
A wheal rises where
the mosquito took the only
blood supper of her
purposeful life. While I sit
waiting for God knows what
it has fallen to me,
what she no longer needs:
the goad of her saliva.
Her fierce itch.
__________
For a place-based essay on mosquitoes by another central Pennsylvania writer, see here.