Carrion Fish
by Paul Brooke
Amazon River
He had just begun
to believe all
human beings
are inherently good
when he finds the box.
Half-submerged, the box
is baited with a rotting
carcass of a boto. It attracts
a swarm of paracatinga,
the ruthless carrion fish.
Columbians taught
the locals how to build
and prepare the trap.
Most Brazilians do not
even like paracatinga.
Downriver, he finds
a pink dolphin alive,
bound and tied dockside,
surname carved into her flank.
Its baby dead in the shallows.
He cuts the rope and frees her.
She swims under her baby,
tries to elevate it to breathe.
He cannot help but hang
his head in shame.
He doesn’t want to accept
the fact: people are pure evil;
they cannot see the cruelty
of their own hands,
their own sick mechanisms.
He climbs the slippery slope
to the fisherman’s house,
rope in hand, knife in sheath,
and pounds hard. He thinks,
I am conscience knocking.
“Bring your daughter,” he says.
He descends to the dock
and makes the fisherman
watch the mother and the calf.
“Sit,” he says, “sit and think.”
The daughter nestles into his lap
as the mother nuzzles her dead
calf. Sobbing deep and aching,
the daughter breaks. The father
repeats, breathe, just breathe.
Sloth and Moth
Bradipodicola hahneli lives on the fur of the sloth
and lays its eggs when the sloth descends to defecate.
About 127 moths can live comfortably on a given sloth.
The world’s population just reached 7 billion people.
A bizarre island
drifts slowly, its forests
flowering with algae,
its coastline studded
with spire-sharp
façades of stone,
a peaceful place,
full of grazing
and plenty of naps.
Its inhabitants
live luxuriantly,
not luxuriously,
a gracious host,
ample flesh-pots,
ample panoramas,
a tiny sphere
balanced
in equilibrium.