Postmonkey
By Judy Brown
As the ship speeds up at Pluto, the earthlight sensors blow.
Lights fade to pastel touches on your toffee-colored fur.
The flight recorder picks up your first words three years in:
a garble of Merriam-Webster, harsh against the hum.
It’s not long before a halo’d planet sets off some chimpy whinge
about a green place and your females smoking red in spring.
When you give up hope, the language program hits its stride:
more dopamine, more titbits, an electrode’s neat incentive.
In the slow lane, a terrace of dying suns, you learn to really talk.
This one is your lab tech’s voice; you’re asking about stars.
Decades in the leatherette pod the psychs designed for you
turn your muzzle silver, and the low-grav wrecks your bones.
Your tail must be bald as a bike chain, the way you grumble.
I transcribed your words on landing, the part with the needle,
where you’re yelling you’re not ready, won’t be rushed.
The cargo hold opens and you’re wiped, then flushed.
Source: Poetry (November 2020)