Later that morning, after borrowing
the neighbor's ladder to pluck an errant plant
growing in a corner of the roof's
front gutter— I decide to also clear
the weeds tangling the mouth of the downspout.
My other neighbor across the street
uses the word "volunteer" when she's talking
about plants that show up in her tidy
garden as if from nowhere.
A stand of curling fern, for instance—
which she didn't put in the soil herself.
Or wildflowers she kept
because they were pretty,
and closer to the sidewalk's edge. I'm tempted
to ask if these plants know what
they're volunteering for: you know, like many
citizens in the community
who've signed up to be poll workers, even if
most of them are over the age of 60 and understand
they're in a group
more susceptible to contracting COVID-19. Young
people too, properly masked, armed
with clipboards and flyers, going door
to door, reminding people how important
it is to register and vote in the coming
elections. And the volunteers stocking community
food pantries, the school children fanning out
across public parks and beaches
to collect trash thoughtlessly tossed
by others in the bushes or on the trails—
This is where, often, someone finds small
animals: turtles, possums, seagulls,
herons, ducks, their heads caught in plastic
six-pack rings, legs wound
in plastic twine. As for migratory birds
that have been seen
falling out of the skies across the south-
western states in the hundreds of thousands,
I don't think they freely offered to take
part in their own mass extinction.
Between raging wildfires
and unseasonable cold snaps, how long
did they reel through the sky until
they couldn't, until they hit
the ground, reduced to feathers and bones? When I
find under the rosemary a bird's narrow skull
of mottled ivory, it's not so much the brittle
hollows of its eye sockets or the wanting
to know whether it was flycatcher,
swallow, or warbler that comes over me
but that there's still a softness
in the hinge that used to work its bill.