Damien Walmsley photo
By
Penn Kemp
A Child’s Garden Fox
Sleepy, sleeping in my mother’s lap. Nestled.
When. A fox ran in front of the car. And
was transfixed by the headlights. Ran and
ran in front of the car but could not escape
the trajectory of light. Caught. Turning head
back, tongue lolling, as in the pictures of foxes
hunted. The eyes like cats’ catching the light
and transmuting it phosphorescent, bouncing it
back. Look! He shook his head and ran off into
the woods. Finally. I did not wake up.
But that night, for nights afterward, a fox was
in my bed. Under my bed. In the closet. Mommy,
there’s a fox in my bed! Make him go away. He
was very large. His coat shot off sparks in the dark.
His eyes were lit coals. He had sharp white teeth. He
was hungry. He smelled musty. He was prowling. He
might have been growling. A sudden switch of the light
evaporated him. I could just catch his tail glimmer away,
up into the fixture. He would curl behind the light, cunning,
until the light was turned off. Then he’d continue to search.
My father for comfort explained that foxes were quite small,
really, like little dogs, and they were more scared of me than
I was of them. Well, I couldn’t imagine the extent of their fear
then. The fox I knew wasn’t scared one bit. He was going to eat
me alive. Unless I played dead. I froze into the mattress.
The folds of the sheet turned marble, a frieze. The fox could
not smell out the stiff and still. I could sleep. Warily.
By day my father used his imagination. Foxes are really tiny, he
said. So small you can hardly see them. That is because you watch
from daylight eyes, I thought, and foxes come out in the dark. So
small you can never see them. Look! There’s one now. He followed
a something flying and caught, cupped it in his huge hands. Slowly
he opened them to let me see. Shh. It’s a fox, he said, and they scare
easy. Be very quiet. I peered into the dark cavern of his hand. That
something, nothing, was gone, not in palm’s hollow, nor the crevices
between fingers. Look, there he is! Flying, there! I followed his eyes,
their darting, dubiously, till catching on. Hey, another one! He pointed,
exulting. I’ll catch it, I squealed, and caught it. I’ve got one. The nothing
in my hand brushed my skin like a moth’s wing, tickling, powder. See?
Dad looked in. The fox flowed out and perched atop the china cabinet
where no-one could reach. Never mind, there’s another! We were all
around the room after foxes. They never stayed in my palm for inspection
the way they did in dad’s. I tried to see their wings. I didn’t know foxes had
wings. They were all around the room, hovering, at the edge of sight, and
prancing. Tiny pairs of eyes glowed from the chandelier, from the top book
shelves. They were like fireflies. Whose lights went on, went out.
Click here for a video reading of the poem
Mary McDonald photo
Penn Kemp
Penn Kemp is an activist Canadian poet, playwright and editor. Her latest works are Local Heroes, and the forthcoming Fox Haunts. Recent books include Barbaric Cultural Practice and two anthologies edited, Women and Multimedia and Performing Women. See www.pennkemp.weebly.com.
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