from Oil

by Alexei Parshchikov
translated by Wayne Chambliss 

from  Oil
Part 2: The Valley of Transit

A jackal and a crow.  Blood neither shed nor shared
between them.  The dynamite, nearby, is armed.
They are barely contours, prepared
to escape the kernel of blackness and assume a rudimentary form.

Above them, thought balloons are floating.  The cartoon repaginates
the seashore, windy, dry as bone.
When the rain falls, it becomes clear the photographer, buried to
his waist, was welded of
bronze and focused on no one.

I’ve hidden the weapon away, disconnected the leads, and will
make my way into the Valley
of Transit.  Farewell, the comic shore!  I know not what I hoped to
find there.
Altdorfer won’t say a word.  Nor Darius.  Hobbled, the crow has
been pecked
by the jackal, looming in the side view mirror.

Between the mountains, the valley blisters, as if with osculatory
pauses.  A bee below the
cliff.  Beneath it, the ludi of the gladiators.
Glinting substations, conduits, conic strata
where mercury slips at the feet of oil riggers, on concrete, driving
rebar.

Like two electric vortices, chasing each other’s tails,
the crow and, a femtosecond later,
the jackal.  Like electrons, entangled, erasing the details . . .  The
valley reverses its field,
untwists, and resembles a lariat.

Its every sector has been precisely fixed
on the chart.  This one is empty.  Empty enough to put one in
mind of a die, always coming

up six,
as if the other five sides existed only in the imagination.

Spans of concrete, corridors, towers partly retract
from the lip of quarry, from open shafts in which a horn
sounds underground.  And a god descends out of orbit,
snatching men from the earth, into the truck, never again to be
found.

An oracle stands at the door, clutching what’s left of her bottle.
With a trembling finger she
traces
a rhizome of flight paths, of undersea cables.
Her awareness drifts in a boozy stasis.
“We await the oil,” she tells me, describing pyramids with her
hands.  “Some dwell with the
rusting fleet, and will hear
the drums in the dreaming tankers.  Come to the Valley of Transit,

they will squirm in hot pitch, hang themselves in a year.

Others will live as nomads, only rarely to appear except in those
sublimes instances when,
with white shirts starched, they will vie to target a suspension
bridge at its plexus and topple the arch.”

Abandoned at an atmosphere as yet too premature
to pull the chute; at that lethargic height
from which the valley appears to square its curves
and resembles a solar zeppelin, its propeller stirred by light,

with geological endurance, arms and legs flailing,
an hysteria barely contained, as the whole grid ignites — the
dematerialized image of a circuit
board failing —
and the valley is plunged into oil; or, more precisely, gets capsized.

By then, I realized my task as an historian and astronomer was false.
“The oil,” I would write, “was not worth winning.
A buried memory, eluding shape or response,
as when, by the order of his son, Ulugbek, was put to death for
erasing the beginning.”