Among the road kill I’ve tallied on Houston streets, the most common casualty is the strangely spelled opossum (from the Powhatan). The least common, incidentally, is the armadillo, with two KIAs sighted in twenty years, both being pecked at by crows. Natives here seem uncommonly fond of opossums, adopting them as the state or regional marsupial mascot. I once helped a neighbor rescue a litter of baby opossums, apparently deserted by their mother, hiding in another neighbor’s junk-filled garage. He bottle-fed them until they were old enough to want to escape.
Up close, they are primitive-looking creatures, even savage, yet with an odd sense of vulnerability about them. They have hairless rat tails and teeth resembling hacksaw blades. They hiss when bothered. Yes, they do “play opossum.” Roughly a dozen times in the last decade our dog has caught one in the backyard, always after dark. Only one was a confirmed kill. The rest walked off after we yanked Luke inside. In the photo above you can see one he treed in the crepe myrtle several weeks ago. In 2022, Benjamin Myers published “Possum” in, of all places, First Things:
“On feet
bare like a desert saint’s, it pads
across the
porch and toward the dry cat food
my wife
pours out for strays. It doesn’t scare
when I
stomp, bellow, toss a pebble
at its rump,
just hisses at me, geezerly,
and keeps on
chewing. Eyes like little radio
dials and
fur like coal snow, smog sky, or anything
smudged,
dirty, it reminds me of the boy
in school we
called Possum for how he slept
through
class and how his eyes were beaded black,
his nose
sharpened to needle fine. When at last
I knock it
off the porch with one quick blow
from a snow
shovel, it scuttles under
a shrub and
disappears into the house’s
cracked
stone foundation, knowing more than I—
beneath the
sound of footfall, chair-scrape, voice
descending like
the ash of distant fire—
the saint’s
strange way to practice death.”
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