The Fragile Pride of the Displaced New Englander

Two poems by Abbie Kiefer

The Fragile Pride of the Displaced New Englander

Away in Tampa

I was there in the cheap seats when the man with Boston 
on his back tackled the giant bug. A shaded skyline that enfolded

his shoulders, revealed when he frenzied his shirt over his head
after Nathan Horton scored in the second—the Ontarian

dispatching the puck so absolutely the net was compelled
to take it in. As if to make something belong, you hack hard as you can.

From the terrace level I cheered too—not for the goal but to make
myself known. Displaced New Englanders never stop needing

to tell you where they’re from. The bug was from Tampa—a woman
named Kelly in a 10-foot foam exoskeleton who silly-stringed a man

when his team was down and away from home. So fervent for a city
he needled it under his skin. As security walked him out, he spiked

a finger in her face—not Kelly’s but the bug’s, with the unwatching
eyes—and snarled as the crowd cheered his ejection. Hockey

gets violent. Players brawl. The refs allow it, the us-and-them-ing,
and we take it for camaraderie: the refs, and the fans, and even me,

indifferent to the game but not the need. Even Kelly, though it cost her
the job. Now she lives in Chicago, custom-crafting mascot costumes

designed to ride light on one's frame, and all machine washable.
Horton eventually got traded to Toronto, never leaving

the injured list, but I hope Canada consoled him. The Bruins took
their loss and headed north, same as we would later that year,

in a U-Haul heavy with everything. The tattooed man lives forever
in a video online. In my memory, I’m right across the aisle, close enough

to hear him scream Stanley Cup into the bug’s meshed mouth.
But I’ve watched the clip a dozen times and I’m nowhere to be found.

Self-Portrait with Vermont Forge’s Heirloom Weeder

that I bought online one night, unable to sleep
and again intent on wresting order
from the mess. On uprooting
clover—even the four-leaf. I don’t believe

in luck, maybe because I’ve mostly had it. I do
believe in knuckling down.
Yesterday, I potted the sprouted pit of a stone
fruit I pulled from the compost.

I’ll overwinter it in the basement
where I can fret about its chances every time
I run on the treadmill.
Exercise is supposed to be good for sleep.

And lavender, though I cut mine back
too hard and it’s not pulling
through. I wish the garden gave me more
time to make good. Five months if I’m lucky—

not that luck exists. Episcopalians
have prayers for the Natural Order,
praising the God who fills all living things
with plenteousness

and I consider my plenty and if I’d make a good
Episcopalian and what else might be available
at Vermont Forge,
what other instruments they make

that could help me. Because in order
to endure, clover can’t be anything
but persistent—
like the faithful, reciting the words of St. Francis,

who is said to have left his garden
wild at the edges and who begged of his God:
Make me an instrument
of peace.

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