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But here’s Silvano, half stooped, half
squatting, under a stand of hemlock, quiet
as a projection, his wolf hybrid
loping and darting, worrying long
circles, widening the route through
the woods where I’m running, Silvano’s
match in quiet, ears pricked, yellow fur
sprung, tail in the balance, sprinting, flushing
doves, fallen birch leaves. My anxiety flares
before vanishing. Silvano’s hunched
over a stump as if feeding. He straightens
and sees me, dirt, pine needles caught
in his hair, the long moustaches
he smoothes when he engages. Underneath,
he looks like me, carries ancestry from Rhodes
and Sicily—dark, but eyes light
as the wolf hybrid’s—and once we’re talking
I don’t pinpoint, fix the language. He’s found
an old rubbish heap, smooth-necked
glass bottles, prescription vials, wire hanger,
plastic soldier. The trash has its mystery, signal
sickness and thirst, afternoons improvised
with little novelty. Staten Island boy,
Silvano, he worked at the refinery
ten minutes down Route One from me.
Silvano and I are both surprised
to be crossing these woods, passing
and living here, complain of the cold
and cool people—Nuovo England,
he says, his tone full of variety.
Yes, and passing, I’ve never asked
what brought or keeps him here, and today’s
no different. He pockets the soldier—whose
child in mind?—nods after a hunting
party half a mile uphill, shows me
a grouse feather that’s mottled and bloody.
Silvano doesn’t worry. He whistles
and the dog comes crashing but keeps
distant, all wolf and no petting. Days
to turn back, stick to the brook below,
shotgun blasts up the mountain, whine
of ATVs, wheel ruts in mud, my flash
of orange sleeves, the shouts and strange
silence. And there are days I’m afraid
of Silvano, his quiet and odd green camo,
his convex mirror and wolf hybrid.
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