On the radio I heard a naturalist say if she were to meet her death from an animal encounter, she would rather it be a large snake—boa constrictor, for example. To be emptied of breath, to pass out en route to inhabiting your own cathedral of absence—you're told it's a romance you hardly have a chance at authorship. But what does the thunder say as it wakes blind spores springing up out of ash- covered soil; out of dead, splintered wood as clouds roll in, heavy with rain? Inside the corn and bean, radicles curl up before growing downward to anchor the seed. In the end or in the beginning, nothing vacates the world forever. Salt sifts and turns to spume, and spume to rain. In the highest bell towers, kestrel and swift build nests with every dry and discarded thing.