Kathryn Smith
Begin each day collecting birds battered
 in the night by creatures bent on malice.
 Give thanks for dew and viscera's bright litter,
 leaves brought down by drought and feathers damp
 with blood. When you say you love fall, be sure
 you know it's death's season. Take shallow
 breaths, reminding you of summer's smoke,
 a wildfire bruise that locked us all inside.
 Cling to warm October afternoons
 as vow to live a waterless winter.
 Drive cross-state to the firefighter's grave
 and read the poem he memorized at 17,
 three years before flames overtook the vehicle
 he rode in, trying to reach disaster.
