Beasts
A mouse on the run,
its wet-bead eyes bursting,
fast along the wainscot,
into corners, under bags,
behind a pile of books.
The cat, balletic in fur,
rears up, arcs and drops,
pinning this leaf-breath,
dry litter, for half a moment
again and again.
The game is there in his forward ears,
his bunched cheeks and whiskers.
The mouse scuttles and shrinks.
As it begins to slow,
failing, a minute stagger,
the cat rubs his face on it,
a savage, momentary love.
I grab the mouse by the tail.
Its seed-heart skitters against
my hand, trapped, too hot.
It empties its innards into my palm,
yellowish, black, smelling of blood.
The cat walks off, tail high.
I abandon the mouse
where the wet grass ends
in the junk of compost
and garden tools,
afraid to watch
this small ending in the house:
complicit. Excited.