Rattled

by Yvette A. Schnoeker-Shorb

Dan Namingha, “Gray Cloud Horizon,” Acrylic on Canvas, 30"x40" ©2019

Dan Namingha, “Gray Cloud Horizon,” Acrylic on Canvas, 30"x40" ©2019

 

Rattled

It was a nasty little rattle,
well, maybe not so small
or so dreadful but more
loud and vigorous; I know

how she feels—threatened
by trespassers, dwelling
disturbed, den most likely
nearby. I am an unwelcome

vibration, a heavy-stepping
beast, binoculars focused
upward on winged things
until the diamondback

stops me in my tracks,
brings to light my lack
of anticipation that she
would even have a home

in the nature preserve;
her presence is everything
I need to remind me
why I flee from tourists,

that my overrun town
is not the only show in life.
Excited about the unexpected,
I tell a ranger down the trail

but shouldn’t have done so,
for he mistook my meaning,
reassuring me the snake,
a nuisance to visitors, would

be removed. As I said, I know
how it feels when your place
is for the benefit of others—
and locals be damned.

 

Yvette A. Schnoeker-Shorb’s work has appeared in About Place Journal, Front Range Review, Weber—The Contemporary West, AJN: The American Journal of Nursing, Watershed Review, Wild Earth, Terrain.org, and elsewhere. She has been an educator, a researcher, and an editor, and is co-founder of the 501(c)(3) nonprofit Native West Press. Having lived in Prescott, Arizona, for over 20 years, she and her husband feel blessed to dwell in the close company of peccaries, tarantulas, ravens, whiptails, and other high-desert dwellers.