Inventory of Ramparts   The pier shed its long 
splinters into the lake.  
 A dinghy rubbed the side of the dock 
but the dock was still.  
 Some kids ditched a canoe in the reeds
 —the boy’s voice was a reed—  
 they pulled it up the embankment by a rope 
where no one could see it from water  
 or shore. His voice covered everything.
 This isn’t an opportunity to talk about the body,
 how many dogs you get to have over
 the course of a life. I’d reckon 6, if you take  
 good care of them. I’m going back in time 
to hold the boy’s head underwater.  
 Just to give him a little scare. The canoe 
had vanished when they returned  
 and his voice became a basket
 pushed down a river—nothing specific—  
 and anyway, this isn’t an occasion to talk 
about the body. I’m busy going, I need
to go, back through those boggy years to kiss 
all of the dogs. Hard, on the mouth.								
									 Copyright © 2019 by Paige Ackerson-Kiely. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.