Trying to Save You
A loud wind haggles with the leaves
  as I drive at 70 mph, veering from 
  a bundle that lies windblown on 
  the shoulder, my mind leaping 
like Knievel across the Grand Canyon 
  from maybe to yes. A baby, it’s 
  the baby some frantic mother wrapped 
  in a frilly blanket and laid there 
in hopes she would be rescued, so I turn 
  around, get out, and find the blanket’s
  empty as the tomb on Easter. Trying to make 
  the world safe can break a person’s heart, 
but good. You could not be rescued.  
  I hear the ferns I hauled in from cold 
  turning to brown rags. The cat 
  we saved from drowning prowls, 
eager to bite us, wild to dash into traffic 
  and die. I’m a map of ways that failed 
  to save you, or what I’ve confused 
  with you. Then I watched death lean 
his ladder against your house and 
  climb through your window with his axe
  to unhook the world from 
  the lovely promontory of your face.  