Highway 12, Just East of Paradise
by Robert Wrigley
The doe, at a dead run, was dead the instant the truck hit her. In the headlights I saw her tongue extend and her eyes go shocked and vacant. Launched at a sudden right angle—say from twenty miles per hour south to fifty miles per hour east—she skated many yards on the slightest toe-edge tips of her dainty deer hooves, then fell slowly, inside the speed of her new trajectory, not pole-axed but stunned, away from me and the truck's decelerating pitch. She skidded along the right lane's fog line true as a cue ball, until her neck caught a sign post that spun her across both lanes and out of sight beyond the edge. For which, I admit, I was grateful, the road there being dark, narrow, and shoulderless, and home, with its lights, not far away.
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from Clemency
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