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5.3
Amy Eisner
Small Antler
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The young buck scratched his head again and the antler toppled into the grass, its points spiking up two clots of mud. It perched in the grass like a frozen bird. The wind was slow in coming. The sun had a way of accumulating. A raccoon’s bright belly lumbered by. When the wind picked up, the trees whirled their heads like the memory of leaping— that crashing sound. That blood.

Amy Eisner teaches creative writing and literature at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore. Her poems have recently appeared in Confrontation, Failbetter.com, and Valparaiso. She loves grapefruit when it's not too sweet. And maybe when it is.