Infestation
You think of a time
your dad left your Christmas tree up
until April.
Its sad carcass dropped a ring of needles
onto your carpet for weeks on end,
but this is
infinitely worse.
For one, this tree’s needles
have faded to russet and for two,
they’ve fallen into the gutter despite
the fact that—unlike a Christmas tree—
this one has roots.
Also, it is three stories tall.
“It’s going to fall on their house
if they don’t cut it down,” your sister says.
You both know you’ve had this conversation,
but what else is there
to say? You’re mourning a tree
that isn’t yours and you wouldn’t have noticed
if it wasn’t shedding its skin into
the road where you take your daily walks.
You kick bitterly
at the crunchy carpet of needles
and think to take your boots off
and step on the spines barefoot
to share in the tree’s pain.
Instead, you talk
with your sister about climate change.
More felled trees in the park.
Down the road.
You’ll probably have a similar conversation
tomorrow
and the next day
until they flag the tree
and carry it away,
leaving just the needles to be swept up
like the day your dad
finally carted that April tree
to the dumpster.