Acc(i)dents (do)n't happen
First published in The Ekphrastic Review, June 2020
After Patrick Pound’s Divers, 2019
Hand over their snapshots, I’ll make
them somersault through their summers
back into my childhood kiddy pool
I’ll see them reanimate into an alternate
timeline where accidents don’t happen
How will our future generations
reconcile us with this moment
presented to them in a poem: his chest
caved in, fingers dismembered eight
feet below him in the deep, her dive
like a cat thrown from a high window:
right-angled legs stiff with cramps
fists creepy crawly obtuse. Whose water
pistol was that? Did you bounce your baby
sister’s head off the backboard? Was it
an accident? He braces for the impact of skin
with concrete water: the murderous thunderclap
chides us inside. Maybe I hyperextended
his back too far. I may have splayed
her arms too wide at play time. Chlorine
spilled from their throats onto my sleeves
and burned my skin. The board broke
before I could fall up the final steps
Maybe I had a hand in this: brace
for impact—Maybe I wanted
it to break like that.