Raven Kept Watch
by Elise Stuart
The Raven is considered a
messenger
by several Native American
tribes.
Raven
sat high above,
watching
the brown house
with
its empty front porch,
broken
picket fence,
battered
gate.
He
heard the shouting,
the
punch,
the
slaps, the screams . . .
Then
nothing―except
early
morning silence.
Raven
saw a large man
who
walked slow,
pushed
himself
into
a red truck,
drove
a crooked path.
He
made a deep kraa sound.
She
awoke from restless sleep,
glanced
out the window―
the
truck gone,
black
raven on the pole.
She
looked around,
nothing
to take,
nothing
she wanted.
Pulled
her jacket on
to
cover the bruises.
Raven
followed her
as
she ran down the sidewalk,
away
from the road the man had taken.
Swooped
down from his perch,
wings
wide.
As
she stepped off the curb,
a
woman in a pickup stopped to let her by.
Raven
circled.
The
woman mouthed thank you, thank you,
a
long scar running across her face.
*
* * * *
Elise
Stuart is Silver City Poet Laureate.
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