TFR Home Page | Contents | Prev. Page | Next Page | Comments |
The Dog Fox By Gillian Grozier Silver threads rip through the fabric of sky, a shooting sign defied by small foragers whose feet make faint sound in the whole white eeriness of moonstroke. Amid rocks, the dog fox barks a ritual summoning. Does he have a mate? Into night's vastness he gives voice, moonlit, chattering. As the blood-filled sun levitates the fox slips over the lip of stone flashing firebox red, circles widely his thick brush sailing behind him, weapon-like. In one fluid, forward motion the fox sinks teeth into a soft neck; some terrified animal shrieks before silence washes back. The dog fox returns to the boundaries of darkened den and blood-soaked days where he finds her, then; she, who eluded him, now sits in sunlight. He drops the dead body and approaches; consentingly, she turns, smaller than he a red, more bronze in sunlight in ritual greeting, his uxoriousness a daystar, then. She, moon-maker, star giver for her he knows he kills, the rocks a fox's witness, the lively dark, the fading, starry day. |
© Copyright 1997, 2024, The Fairfield Review Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Document last modified on: 02/04/1999