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ERIN L. MCCOY.August 2025


ERIN L. MCCOY

Photo by Jeff Sirkin


 

“OCCURRENCE OF A FOREIGN BAT IN ORKNEY”

 

After a paper by John Wolley, egg collector

and auk researcher, published in Zoologist

in 1849.

 

There is no explanation for loss. A shovel’s nose smacks the dirt. While digging potatoes, they caught a bat. Band of yellow hair.

 

On his first trip north, Wolley tracked sea eagles by the lamb-shaped gaps in flocks. A hundred years later, sheep were stamped with bright spots, hot pink or oyster blue or mauve on the haunch. No fear of eagles, long since wiped out.

 

No such bat lived in all of Scotland. A singularity is lonely; that is its defining fault.

 

Wolley became worried for the auk.  Its shrunken wings were brilliant if  observed  through  the  plate  glass  of  the  sea’s  surface,  but on land— a failure of foresight.

 

Twelve years later, Wolley died at thirty-six. The consensus among the society of the Ibis journal is that his brain, like an egg, opened.

 

There is no explanation for a bird that once could fly and now cannot.

 

There was little wanting in him, wrote Alfred Newton after Wolley’s death. At the eagle’s reintroduction, sheep flocks fled along the upper slopes of the Orkneys and the Isle of Skye, where the clouds push so near you can stick out your tongue and taste a dozen kinds of snow. North enough that the crevice between heaven and earth is narrow. There’s no use for flight. Pieces of the closest planets used to break off and nest in the crown of the auk’s head.

 

 

 

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POST-ATLANTIC

after she escapes the sky, witch-auk drifts a long time on an empty atlantic. she washes ashore in new england, & i come to meet her there. down the boardwalk a team of gulls hacks up french fries & steamed clams. one is nutcracker-postured with an entire corndog down his throat; the stick flagpoles out his beak. but look,

 

the ocean always clung to its bounty. unpalatable fish float inert & crooked like boomerangs, the crabs oily in their mood-ring shells. & that there was once a wild-eyed captain who hunted a single whale for years

 

isn’t  that  impressive,  when  others  made  quicker  work  of  the  beasts. a clot of boys at the end of the dock smears us up & down with yellow eyes.  they  flick  their  kershaws  open  &  shut.  i  let  them  crack  me open, cut out & examine my organs one by one—no pearl, disappointment—toss them off the pier. witch-auk presses her cheek into my palm. when

 

will she find out about me? a drunk man toddles up to us, says his name  is  gary,  tells  us  his  story,  how  he’s  leaving  town  after  bedding a    woman    two    feet    taller    than    him    &    she’s    become    attached. shit happens, he says. go west.

 

we’ve read about it: a pacific raw & squirming, mussels caking every surface,  &  the  scales  of  fish  translucent  with  a  grand  inhuman  light. i still believe that pain is a suit you can leave behind. i want to bleach my guts of me. so witch-auk and i decide to go together: toward forgetting.

 

witch-auk takes one last dip in the atlantic, shoots beneath the waves, & the bent fish wriggle back to life as she goes. i look over the railing at my reflection to wave goodbye. we haven’t seen each other in a long time. maybe someday she’ll be worth saving.

 

 

 

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WE’VE SEEN THE NEED FOR DISGUISES

in the changing room at the goodwill, witch-auk

will not make a decision. we’ve tried a lacy holiday

apron, horn-rimmed glasses (no lenses), a bow tie,

some mary jane pumps that (i should have predicted)

she can’t walk in without tripping, an egg-shaped

basket in which to carry—should she ever carry—

& of course a pointed halloween hat, although

she does not find this funny. in the end we leave

undisguised—which I know is a mistake.

who can see her beauty? out on the sidewalk

the passersby whistle & bump us, the cars slow

& honk, a skateboarder ogles mid-kickflip,

& the milkman in milk cap quits swinging his pail.

witch-auk stops in a puddle. she won’t budge.

the ripples expand from her feet. the water crests

& crests like she’s dropping through it. the world slows

around us as though viewed through syrup:

& reflected on their eyes’ curved planes

we are warped beings, though witch-auk shrugs

so what if we are. we ride the puddle all the way

to the river &, as we pass, all the petrified faces

look like tarnished crystal, like chipped goblets

or pennanted soldiers lining the pitch of our parade.

we catch the current, we drift off, we feel them waving.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

GREATEST

witch-auk & me sweat from our seams & sleep in our dreams & the trek has grown so exhausting that i don’t recall the last truck or the truck

 

before it, just that they’ve been mack trucks and this too’s a mack truck. witch-auk dangles her flippers over the stick shift

 

over rubber mats with bulldogs on them over the pinkish road rolled out over a hundred miles of colorado scrubland.

 

little   use   for   flippers   here.   the   driver   starts   the   conversation   with   where   you   headed, like they all do.

 

he says he’s bound home, points to a photo adhered to the dash of a woman with feathered bangs, her hands on the shoulders of a small girl.

 

i say witch-auk has relatives in california—the greatest auk, miomancalla howardae (though when I told her this,

 

she  didn’t  want  to  hear).  had  relatives,  i  correct  myself,  many  years  ago.  the  driver  laughs in a way that’s not glad, says i get it,

 

nods  at  the  picture,  she’s  older  now  he  says.  witch-auk  wants  to  ask  how  much  older  &  i tell her that’s enough & keep quiet.

 

the  driver  twists  at  his  beard  with  one  hand  on  the  wheel.  the  radio  crackles  into  silence & he gets to humming & witch-auk

 

starts clacking her beak in counterpoint—like she knows the tune. he clicks the headlights on & we drive through the night like this—that song

 

in so many variations that i never can figure out how to join in. around four a.m., the driver starts crying, tears wiggling

 

down the wires of his beard. witch-auk leans against his arm. i have moved like a ghost across my own waking. through everyone i meet.

 

 

 

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WITCH-AUK & ME REACH THE PACIFIC

having spruced up our new

isle, plucked clear the beard

of its citadel, except for one

access—a basalt slope only

she & i know—witch-auk

snuggles down into a mound

of eelgrass & shells.

looks around herself.

like an egg is coming.

like it will arrive

from the outside, since

she has never in her life

seen how this works.

i have adorned

the slope’s bannisters:

feather-tongued barnacles,

tassels of bull kelp,

its hollow knobs filled

with sludge that glows

when you shake them,

which the sea does & does.

this ocean is an ever-

exhaling; bright foam

spits high into the cedars,

& the salt tastes pink

or like bubbles scooping

out a cetacean skull.

witch-auk shuts her eyes.

the waves stall.

with the sea gone

to glass, there is a way

that the clouds churn

below the water’s surface

that makes me understand

belief. i set out rowing,

search the whole sea.

the sun, paused in its

route, boils like a yolk.

i don’t know how long

we go on like this.

 

 

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POST-PACIFIC

look, witch-auk, whoever has ever

owned the whole sea, has made it tiny.

shallow in its skins of oil & cups.

slug-tongued with sunk hulls &

the drug of smearing warmth.

who has owned the whole sea

think they too own us—but they don’t,

do they? not the cotton-stuffed body of [],

killed on eldey & propped on a plank

in a brussels museum. not the body of []

out for cleaning at the smithsonian.

instead they showed me a shoebox of bones.

i didn’t want to tell you, but there’s nothing in me

you can’t reach. not the felt of new snow

that told me one winter to stop trying.

not that lunchroom table where i said too much

& never will again. not the bottle of cognac

a man whose name i’ve forgotten

brought to my door, & i let him

like i was a machine. but he doesn’t

have me. do you understand? nor

the ocean, whatever he calls it.

nor does the egg you never laid

deliver back into his grip. if you & i

came out not-quite-human, came out

monstrous, i still love the careful way

you nudge a blade of bull kelp

washed ashore in this last world

twisted to the shape of that last world.

this is ours—our disappointment.

also ours: how you place me whole

into the palm of my own hand.

 

 

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ERIN L. MCCOY


Erin L. McCoy’s
poetry collection, Wrecks, will be published by Noemi Press in 2025 and was a finalist for the Noemi Book Award. Her debut novel, Underlake, is forthcoming from Doubleday in 2026. Erin’s poetry and fiction have appeared in the American Poetry Review, Best New Poets, Pleiades, Conjunctions, and other publications, and she was a finalist for the Missouri Review’s Miller Audio Prize. She is an assistant poetry editor at Narrative and a proofreader at Penguin Random House. She holds an MFA in creative writing and an MA in Spanish and Latin American literature from the University of Washington. Her website is erinlmccoy.com.

 

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August 2025.ERIN L. MCCOY