Thursday, August 26, 2021

Peterborough Murder Mystery


 

We say, “Good night,” but the night

incorporates nothing good.

The river exhales an opaque mist.

We both hear the splash of a corpse

tossed from the bridge. We return

to the spot on the pavement

where our alibis had lingered

not quite long enough. The stiff

may turn up so far downstream

no one will blame us for dashing

to the all-night diner to regroup.

 

The stainless well-lit space

hums to itself. Cops perch on stools

and chat up the waitress. Her face

is cloudy as a nebula. Smiles

droop from it like rusty sickles.

We order coffee and console

ourselves with knowable facts.

That splash may be innocent.

Maybe it was a buck deer leaping

into the river for a bath.

Maybe it was suicide

and therefore not our business.

 

But there was something absolute

about that splash, something creeping

through the mist to shiver us.

Only murder crawls so many

legged up the spine and haunts

bystanders with a lack of clues.

The squat cops gnawing burgers

are prepared to handle the dark side

of this village. But we know nothing,

except that the river’s very cold.                         

 

Was that your carcass or mine

tossed so casually into the dark?

Let whoever finds the victim

drifting downriver alert

whatever authority lingers

in this world of gray excuses.

The mist is so thick tonight

it erases all but the cruelest

moments, leaving minor dramas

to terminate well before dawn.