as told by Marji-Gesick
my niece did and did not meet this man everett
she brought him to me and she did not bring him
he found me on the banks of the water they call teal
or he didn’t
i danced for him when he came, a tradition to create
smoke reflectors, and he smiled as i welcomed him
into my home, though i never saw his face
i led him to god’s thunder dwelling, deposited
him on the front step, introduced them to one another
by name or i left him at the precipice, mountain eyes on him alone
a map in his mind i may or may not have with a stick
in dirt drawn for his benefit, then swept away
under my foot, divulging only for a moment
this god of thunder, also of lightning—i walked away
backwards, completely aware (or unaware) of his intentions,
to take as much as he could, to keep it all to himself
i heard later that the roots of the mighty pine spoke
fondly of its place on the forest floor undisturbed
and reflecting moonlight unbothered for all eternity
but everett didn’t hear her, didn’t see her lips move
because i heard he was blind, which i knew before
or did not know before he ever arrived at my doorstep