Hybrid,  Issue 38

Three Essays on Ants While I Hover Overhead, Poisoning Them

by Dennis James Sweeney

 

How Regret Falls Like Rain, Seasonal but Never Promising

 

The          ants          waltz          in          droves          to          their          dying          :          sweet         
syrup          at          the          brittle          edge          of          hunger          .          I          do         
not          want          to          kill          a          being          .         I          do          not          want         
to          be          death         .          But          the          ants          are          driven          mad         
by          my          small          war          .          Their          faces          glow          with         
ghoulish          hairs          I          can          feel          in          my          teeth          .          I         
touch          the          echo          of          a          body          ,          a         swarm          calculating         
:          where          in          the          house          can          I          hide          from          hunger         
(where          in          the          house          is          the          nearest          peace          )          ?

 

I          am          telling          you          about          homeownership          ,          fatherhood         
,          and          the          cold          mass          of          protection          .          My          body         
hovers          over          the          ants          ,          a          shadow          .          Darkness          for         
the          ants          is          a          sun          fleeing          .          No          ,          I          do         
not          know          how          to          love          what          I          glimpse          .

 

I          have          to          kill          them          ,          I          say          to          myself          .         
I          will          not          forget          —          you          have          to          choose          who         
you          love          and          me          ,          I          have          chosen          .          I          will         
bleach          the          edges          of          our          house          .          I          will          firewash         
the          window          panes          .          I          love          my          family          ,          and         
love          means          killing          every          threat          .         

 

I          would          rather          die          than          kill          ,          I          say          to         
myself          .          But          I          have          made          promises          in         life          ,         
and          promises          are          meat          .         

 

Kill          with          the          sanctimonious          pressure          of          household         
commitment          .          Kill          for          the          trapped          and          boiling         
basement          treat          .          Kill          because          my          ring          itches          .         
Kill          because          I          am          in          charge          of          the          garage          and         
its          grease          .          Kill          beneath          the          clouds          that         evaporate         
killing          .          Kill          with          the          chilly          force          of          a          barely-
fitting          grate          .          Kill          because          the          blankets’          smell         
incites          feverish          memories          .          Kill          with          the          exactitude         
of          a          mechanistic          age          .          .          .

 

Oh          ,          kill          the          gendered          distribution          of          labor          .         
Kill          being          asked          to          kill          because          you          are          a          man        
.          Kill          the          cave          of          homophonic          longing          .          Kill         
my          accomplishments          ,          kill          the          sport          ,          where          contact         
lingers          hard          and          great          .          Kill          abstention          .          Kill         
killing          .          Kill          oil          ,          the          falsified          thing          that         
smooths          our          limbs          .          .          .

 

Then          listen          to          the          cracks          :          I          live          in          my         
house          like          ants          live          .          They          huddle          in          the         
floorboards          .          They          exist          .          And          I          writhe          at          the         
center          ,          an          empire          though          cars          declare          RESIST          ,         
and          even          the          floorboards          supply          a          home          only          to         
purify          all          who          do          not          fit          ,          which          is          every         
thing          that          lives         ,          the          ants          first          ,          me          last          ,           
as          gracious          as          empire          has          ever          been          .          “          A         
man’s          house          is          his          castle          .          ”          Windows          are          for         
looking          upon          our          threat          ,          and          I          am          bent          on         
my          knees          dripping          poison          into          the          floor          ,          helpless         
as          the          ants          pace          mad          circles          ,          ravaged          by          the         
sweet          agent          .          Infinity          crawls          beneath          this          wood          ,        
ever-flowing          bath          of          companions          ,          and          I          will          kill         
them          until          I          die          .          I          want          to          cry          but          I         
do          not          know          how          to          .          I          want          to          cry          not         
for          them          but          for          myself          .

 

Instead          I          will          falsify          my          love          .          I          will          live         
a          violent          devotion          .          I          will          massage          forgetting          into         
the          wood          ,          the          nervous          house          ,          the          tense         
system          .          There          ,          like          waking          minutes          between          sleep          
they          eat          ,          so          sweet          ,          calm          with          a          coat          of         
blood          to          stay          warm          in          .          Warm          out          .          Warmth         
decays          ,          and          then          —

 

 

 

As If We Could Flee From Nearness

 

Theimpossibletexturesofmorningdripintothenewhouse,spaceforthethoughtfulnessthathasalwaysbe
encrammed.Butantspilehardatthemouthofthepoison,can’tgetenough,oldtaleofthebottleneckleadin
gtohell.Whatelseforthesuntoriseon,mysteriouspressofedgesonedges?Acolonyisthepartoftheselftha
tridiculestheself.

Iwoketodayinmyownswarm.Theinfinitpressoftime,thewallsgripachother,sweatlikeacoldbottlelefti
nthepromiseofabreakforallkind.Killingissomethingthathasalreadybeenaccomplished.Howelsetopu
mpthestateDeathiswarm,that’srealenergy,bodiesbecomebodieswhenthereisanendlessdelay.Ileave
homewiththegloryofstayinguprightsurroundedbyenough.Ireturnhomecompressed,airmushedintoa
weightymessage,allofitacrystal-hardmarble’ssize.

WhenIwassmallweaddedmorehousetoourhouse.Welivedinourpristinepinkness.Ouredgedglasstabl
etopsterrifiedme.

I’mnotsmallnow.Tightwithcreation.Thickincontrol,treesundermulch,leavesacrust,papermountains
ofamemoryofamemory.Windowslookingatthelooked-atthing,that’spowerifI’veeverheardit.You’reoutsideandIcanseeyou.We’reallteethbeinggnashedfro
mwithin.Particlesofselfgrindintimately.Perceptionisthenearnessofanextbreath.

Survivalisafamilybusiness,compoundeyeshorrifiedbythesingularity.

Thedigitsofthestarsparseuntiltheyravagethemselves.Splitintoaskeletonkey.

 

Thankyou,myorganssmashtogetherlikeascreamedconversion,aspherelingersintheflatlandscape,Ilo
vebutnooneistheretoreceiveit,anemptyroomistheresultofdecay.Theliveswillnotwaitforyou,thecrus
hislonesome,everythingisnothingbutthelackofatrait,thiscolonylives,thiscolonylives,itfallstogetheri
nahill,itrisesinamountain,todayisamass,aprayer,agushingweight,acave.

 

There Was Nothing I Couldn’t Do, Except Disappear

 

Ants would just come up from the floorboards.


I had to kill them. That was my job in the family.


I didn’t want to kill, but if I didn’t—what next?


They had already begun crawling over our bodies in the night.


Our bodies would have become their bodies, and we weren’t ready to let go of ourselves.

This is the fault in claiming something is yours.

Every day I even eat, I think of who I am killing. Self-sufficiency has always haunted me.

The crazed desire to ask nothing of anyone!

We all know where self-sufficiency leads.

I live to crush the air where I stand.

The ants course underneath me like a mat made of water.

A soft mat where I cannot rest.

I do not want the authority of a living being.

I want to be a stone, a shadow of encased memories.

I want to be a cloud that forms and dissipates with no exhaustion.

I want to be breath, only that, no body at all. I want to spin and spin on my own swallowed axis.

I want to love without defending.

In, out, breath does not know what it is passing through. It only feels the cool house of flesh.

Morning, however, is the rise of need.

I drink water with a capful of Apple Cider Vinger in it. I incorporate it.

Maybe all killing is this way: less destruction than absorption.

I carry around the price of my existence with me.

This is the reason I must die eventually, too.

You can bury yourself—or you can carry a heavy sack of dirt around.

My solution was to kill the ants.

I killed them.

I gave them poison that spread to the entire colony.

I don’t know what it feels like to die, and they know.

Night is falling on the day I defend. The house is quiet and seething.