In Charlottesville After Charlottesville

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Tonight they’ve hung up lights in lilts across 2nd
and Water Street on the downtown mall, a Christmas choir
singing Oh Holy Night—twenty-four people lined
against the painted brick wall, its peeling curls—the wall
Will knelt beside on one knee, face full of fear, a sidewalk of gum
and toppled ice cream, to ask if I could always call him
mine—the same wall we crouched against in August,
shielding our heads with our arms, our bags, our books,
whatever we brought along that might protect us
from the rocks and spit they threw,
their emptied tear gas canisters hurled by arms roaring
with blood, their faces doing that angry Goya thing
with the colors. My mother called hours
after Heather breathed last, called
to make sure our front door was locked;
that I remembered tomorrow was a Holy Day
of Obligation, and if I didn’t go to church it would be
a mortal sin. Her own version of danger. That time in August
flowers weren’t blooming but there was one frail rose
on our rented front yard, and we could see it
from the upstairs window, the rose, but also
the gunmetal gray Dodge, plate GVF 1111, three houses
down, abandoned and blood-caked from taking
Heather’s life and mowing over others, full throttle forward
then revved into reverse, the steel front bumper
severed, like two arms bent, palms up
and sorry. A car to take a person places, not to take
someone away, and at the window Will became more beautiful
to me, his fingers on the glass, all of them his. Now, sort of,
mine too. The driver ran into the woods to crouch
and hide out like a squirrel. We walked our dog
through those woods that morning, green
and lush, as if beauty’s sole defense
is to always just be beautiful. On that Feast of the Assumption
Charlottesville opened their eyes as if a body
punctured. Tiki torches on fire. Adult children playing
with their fathers’ guns. There is a sound a body makes
when bounced off the hood of a car
that no one should hear. Tonight snow falls
peacefully, and the choir sings Fall
 
on your knees, and because we have nothing else to give, we do.
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