After the Wilderness

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MAY 3, 1863
When Clifford wasn’t back to camp by nine, 
I went to look among the fields of dead 
before we lost him to a common grave. 
But I kept tripping over living men 
and had to stop and carry them to help 
or carry them until they died,
which happened more than once upon my back. 
And I got angry with those men because 
they kept me from my search and I was out
still stumbling through the churned-up earth at dawn, 
stopping to stare into each corpse’s face, 
and all the while I was writing in my head 
the letter I would have to send our father, 
saying Clifford was lost and I had lost him.

I found him bent above a dying squirrel 
while trying to revive the little thing. 
A battlefield is full of trash like that — 
dead birds and squirrels, bits of uniform. 
Its belly racked for air. It couldn’t live. 
Cliff knew it couldn’t live without a jaw. 
When in relief I called his name, he stared, 
jumped back, and hissed at me like a startled cat.
I edged up slowly, murmuring “Clifford, Cliff,” 
as you might talk to calm a skittery mare, 
and then I helped him kill and bury all
the wounded squirrels he’d gathered from the field.
It seemed a game we might have played as boys. 
We didn’t bury them all at once, with lime, 
the way they do on burial detail, 
but scooped a dozen, tiny, separate graves.
When we were done he fell across the graves
and sobbed as though they’d been his unborn sons. 
His chest was large — it covered most of them. 
I wiped his tears and stroked his matted hair, 
and as I hugged him to my chest I saw
he’d wet his pants. We called it Yankee tea.

© Andrew Hudgins