Caddis

n. a worm; a weave

Green, olive, pale butter, cream, the soft-bodied grub in its portable case
Cases are tubular, collaged of debris, fastened by silk spun from the larval mouth
Mouth of the Great Lake blowing the last ice flats downriver
Rivers, riffles, lakes, streams, seeps, ponds, creeks—the architect builds its room in fresh waters
Water in December, cold and clean, a glittering guest at the front door
Door through which the head emerges: bristled, biting mouthparts, light & motion-sensing eyes
Eye of the rainbow sees panoramic caddis-snow—casemaker, collector, scraper, swimmer—adrift
Drifting through the midlayer on silken parachutes, out of Gondwana, across time
Time of peak drift, the sliver before dusk
Timespan of case construction, a day
Timeline of transfiguration, a year
Lifetime of fly, an anorectic moon
Moontime, the architect collects, in its grapple-hooked prolegs: sand, shell, stone, twig, bark, leaf,
____ cellulose-based rayon, polyester, acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene, polyacrylamide, vinyl ester
____ resin, polyvinyl chloride, thermoplastic polyurethane, polypropylene, polyethylene
Polyethylene plastic nurdles, one billion pounds a year, manufactured by Nova Chemical
Nova Chemical says their plastics make everyday life healthier for people on the St. Clair River
Rivers are prime sinks for marine microplastics
Microplastics wander my blood, my brain, my heart, my lungs, my liver, my kidneys
Microplastics colour my breastmilk, my eyes, my throat, my ovaries, my saliva, my urine
Microplastics are in the zooplankton, zebra mussels, moths, mosquitoes, mayflies, in gobies, perch,
____ pickerel, in bass, bloater, bluegill, in pumpkinseed, catfish, whitefish, in
In the developing world, says Nova Chemical, the thirst for plastics is off the charts
Charting Lake Huron by distribution, type, and abundance of plastic debris per beach
Beaches at Sarnia yield ninety-four percent of total polyethylene nurdles across all sites sampled
Samples over a decade show plastics in nine-tenths of all Great Lakes drinking water
Great Lakes drinking water should be clean and cold
Cold December moon, Manidoo-giziisoons, Little Spirit Moon, the soft-bodied grub in its
____ microplastic case
Cases are swallowed whole, with their soft-bodied spirits, by glittering trout with panoramic eyes
I am pretty pleased, says the mayor, industry is the real hero here
Here in Sarnia, come springtime, caddisfly lift from the river like mist at dawn

Shine Early, Spring Salmon

My father and I pulled weeds today—
mouse-ear chickweed. Highly invasive.
European, of course.

In the forest, on walks, we target
cheat grass. Another invasive import.

This all started recently, this fixation
on invasive plants. It all started because
my mom wants native wildflowers
in the front of their house.

I’m trying to make this into
a metaphor, but it’s so literal:
the invaders are at the gate.

We walk through the forest
and I try to read it like a book.
I imagine I have the eyes of my Karuk ancestors,
eyes that could tell friend from foe
on the forest floor
with a glance.

What sicknesses would they notice
in the patterns of the moss?

Thousands of generations
spent
learning
________tending
___________befriending
our quiet kin.

Two generations
_____________to forget.

It is June, and I am sad
that pakachakaachas—
the Stellar’s Jays—
are gone. Tâat,
Kach’Aka, Píshiip and Axak left
two days ago from their drain pipe
nest, and my heart is filling their
void
______with
___________flowers.

At one time, Karuk speakers had accents thick enough that
they could tell where folks grew up by their
diphthongs and twangs. This fact makes me more
sad than many others that also make me
sad.

___________________________________We will never know the sum of what we’ve lost.

But the dams, at last, are broken.
The salmon swim again.
One hundred years,
One hundred
___________generations
Yet still they remember the way.

Karuk stories end
with this phrase
“Shine early, Spring Salmon, hurry upriver.
My back is straight.”

April is called iruravahívkuusra.
Spring Salmon month.

_______________________________________________The invaders are at the gates.

One hundred years ago
the Klamath dams were built
to be permanent.
But it was not the dams that
stood the test of time.

How long can this year go on?
I ask the salmon,
looking at the
destruction
____________invasion
_______________________conflagration
around the planet.

One year, she replies mildly.
Then it’s done.

Countdown

10… 

“When you look down at Earth, what do you think you’ll see?” 

Planetary departure is inevitable. There’s nothing left here for her to do. Mandatory isolation is T-minus three days. The dishes reside as permanent tenants in the stainless steel sink—water rations. Seeds from last year’s harvest, pocketed away in small business card-sized envelopes. 

Some for Harry to take, and the rest to stay with me, tucked away in a waterproof bag.

“Layers and layers of blue, and you. I think I’ll always be able to see you.” 

Her fingers dance alongside the back of my hand, past the scar from the time I tried to remove the pit from an avocado. A long-ago fruit. A long-ago scar. 

She’ll still be here, but not really.

9…

“Do you have to go up there?”

Stevie Nicks sings about time casting a spell on both of us from a spinning vinyl in the den. Harry cocoons herself against my back, wrapping her thin arms around my hollow stomach and up between my breasts. It’s too hot to lie like this, but we do it anyway. 

“The Ruby-crowned Kinglet and the Nashville Warbler—”

“Gone?” 

Harry nods her forehead into the nape of my neck, loosening my thinning braid. I want to tell her we can do more, convince the neighbors to turn their lights off at night, compost, but I know better. 

She says, “Without the birds…” 

Between her and me, it’s the things left unspoken that make me understand her the most. I hope Stevie is right and that she won’t forget me. 

Without the birds, the crickets won’t chirp.

The petrichor will be but a faint memory.

8…

“It’s about the tilt, then?”

Harry mouths delicate words—morrowlight, aurorae, lustrate—into my chest. Natural oil ran out long ago, but it doesn’t stop her from drilling straight through the core of my heart. 

“During Spring Equinox, the sun crosses the celestial equator, and the Earth’s axis doesn’t tilt away or toward the sun.”

The reflection of my eyes in hers is a tiny dwarf planet, expansive and deep. I’m reclassified like Pluto, no longer clearing her orbit.

Glow-in-the-dark stars constellate the ceiling of our bedroom into heart-shaped glaciers and ice. 

A forgotten planet is on everyone’s lips.

7…

“Would it be so different? ”

Harry paces the rug at the foot of our bed like an invisible spacehook is tugging her back. I spent last night buzzing her wavy shoulder-length hair down with a number two guard. 

“Gene expression changes in space, but they’re changing here, now. You can see that, can’t you?” 

I think about the phantom tether between me and my mother and my grandmother, how our lives begin and end in a hypoxic state. With Harry, the air continues to evaporate.

With the window open, nothing moves through. 

6…

“Do you remember our first date?”

There’s a Polaroid of us on the fridge. 

I stand at the portable camp stove, poking at what should be Harry’s favorite meal—Pho. But it’s mainly broth for her to eat one last time. Protein pills sound like such a drag.

“You named all the planets from biggest to smallest in less than ten seconds.”

I’d never met a real astronaut before. 

“JupiterSaturnUranusNeptuneEarthVenusMarsandMercury.” 

The planet’s names whistle through the gap in my teeth. A party trick, maybe, but two pieces of metal in space will collide eventually, only to fuse with the other.

Pale, yellow garlic scapes lay on the cutting board. Overflowered. 

But the bees don’t come.

5…

“Did you ever love me?”

Harry stops packing her 3.3 lbs of personal items. Everything that matters is right here in this house, on this land, even if it’s not thriving, too big for a bag. 

“I won’t spend our last days together proving what you already know to be true.”

She steps into my space and pulls the shirt off my body. A threadbare old cotton thing from a Pride run we did together at the beginning of our relationship. She rolls it with precision, tucking it into a sealed Ziploc bag, next to her other personal preference items.

I think of all the flowers I’ll never get to smell again if she doesn’t go now.

April hasn’t been the same since the lilacs stopped blooming. 

4…

“How much time do we have left?”

This existence is intolerable. I used to count the days, weeks, and months we’d been together until the years were a blurred mess of always.

“An eternity if we’re lucky. The rest of our lives if we’re smart.”

But we’ve done all the smart things, reduced our carbon footprint. Washed on cold. Went vegan. Showered together. 

What a waste.

A day on Earth is almost a year on Venus. Twin sisters. Fraternal but not identical. 

3…

“And if you don’t come back?”

Warm droplets pelt our skin, and what a relief to know, March’s rain wasn’t the last we’d ever feel.

“Do you feel that? The world wants to soften, to grow again.”

Forehead to forehead, she peppers her lips across my cheeks, nose, and mouth. 

Rain on a wedding day is a good omen. 

But what about on liftoff?

2…

“If it all goes dark?”

A Harvest Moon casts an orange glow on an inky sky. But she has her seeds, and I have mine.

“Stars twinkle. Don’t forget to romanticize the darkness, too.”

Phosphenes bloom behind closed eyes. 

Flashes of light, sparks, and color. 

1…

“What’s left to say?”

That we haven’t already said to one another.

Some things have disappeared over time, like the chamomile lawn Harry grew and the good coffee.

“We’re on a parallel countdown, you and I.”

Desperation lingers, along with the impression of her on the mattress. I wait for the tilt—for the sunbeams to scatter light across the room again before I break the earth with the spade. 

But for now it’s only darkness.

We’re an Ark split in two.

Submit to GENDER TROUBLE until June 15!

X