October 22, 2020
499: Leaving Tulsa
October 22, 2020
499: Leaving Tulsa
Leaving Tulsa
by Jennifer Elise Foerster
for Cosetta Once there were coyotes, cardinals in the cedar. You could cure amnesia with the trees of our back-forty. Once I drowned in a monsoon of frogs— Grandma said it was a good thing, a promise for a good crop. Grandma’s perfect tomatoes. Squash. She taught us to shuck corn, laughing, never spoke about her childhood or the faces in gingerbread tins stacked in the closet She was covered in a quilt, the Creek way. But I don’t know this kind of burial: vanishing toads, thinning pecan groves, peach trees choked by palms. New neighbors tossing clipped grass over our fence line, griping to the city of our overgrown fields. Grandma fell in love with a truck driver, grew watermelons by the pond on our Indian allotment, took us fishing for dragonflies. When the bulldozers came with their documents from the city and a truckload of pipelines, her shotgun was already loaded. Under the bent chestnut, the well where Cosetta’s husband hid his whiskey—buried beneath roots her bundle of beads. They tell the story of our family. Cosetta’s land flattened to a parking lot. Grandma potted a cedar sapling I could take on the road for luck. She used the bark for heart lesions doctors couldn’t explain. To her they were maps, traces of home, the Milky Way, where she’s going, she said. After the funeral I stowed her jewelry in the ground, promised to return when the rivers rose. On the grassy plain behind the house one buffalo remains. Along the highway’s gravel pits sunflowers stand in dense rows. Telephone poles crook into the layered sky. A crow’s beak broken by a windmill’s blade. It is then I understand my grandmother: When they see open land they only know to take it. I understand how to walk among hay bales looking for turtle shells. How to sing over the groan of the county road widening to four lanes. I understand how to keep from looking up: small planes trail overhead as I kneel in the Johnson grass combing away footprints. Up here, parallel to the median with a vista of mesas’ weavings, the sky a belt of blue and white beadwork, I see our hundred and sixty acres stamped on God’s forsaken country, a roof blown off a shed, beams bent like matchsticks, a drove of white cows making their home in a derailed train car.
"Leaving Tulsa," by Jennifer Foerster, from LEAVING TULSA by Jennifer Foerster, copyright © 2013 Jennifer Foerster. Used by permission of University of Arizona Press.