Current
Issue

Volume 12.2

Ellen Kombiyil
2025 Michelle Boisseau Poetry Prize Finalist


Armadillo

Our landlady said “No pets.” 
The mice in the walls didn’t count. 
I wanted an armadillo. The toilet 
Always overflowed, I was tired of paying rent.

What would I do with an armadillo
How would I care for it what  
Would it eat where would it sleep
How could I be responsible for  

Its armadillo happiness?  
I thought its ridged skin  
Would offer a kind of protection.
Would it eat grapes would

It feast on the leaves of lilacs  
When dusk descends?  
All winter mice streamed in.  
I confess I killed them  

And got my kids to help too.
At night we’d fry bacon, collect
Drippings, dip chips in fat  
& set traps—fat upon fat—

Then turn out the lights.
Clack clack went the traps.
Armadillo of flight armadillo  
As talisman armadillo of no

Harm armadillo of wanting
To live. O to walk with armadillo 
Feet sinking into the mud.  
In the morning I logged  

Photographs, wrapped mice  
In plastic & like a cat  
After all night prowling  
Brings offerings to her lord

I deposited them outside the landlady’s door.
Shame armadillo has no place
In this poem. You armadillo
With your hard-shell skin you  

With no fable assigned to your kin  
No moral to alight my straight path
No future no past just the facts
Armadillo. You who squeaks and scurries  

Who clacks across formica  
You in splendor my little turtle hare 
My teensy jerre-jerre, o to allow 
(To allow!) the heart to be tender.

Bio Copy here

Back to top Arrow