The Dirge
You cut off my hands.
I drowned these stumps in premium whiskey to stem
the jilted flow.
Your book weighs heavily on my pelvis. You were too busy dying to notice that I birthed
this bastard pen.
You eluded me all morning. I scoured encrypted messages with no orders in sight.
My ears have sounded the death knell. Dear Lord, I have
grown too weary.
Thirst
Her intentions are as seamless
As a roll of dollar store Saran
Wrap unfixed at opposite poles.
She masks pathological cowardice
With witty cover-ups to
Conceal her evil eye
With a working cock
She'll split your ass in two
And write a tale about you later
She is the one your best friend
Warned about but you were
Too fucking thirsty to listen
Siesta
Auntie lies in a porcelain box. Her black hair ripples at the surface. Her husband works at the blood caked around her ears. He hears the Muezzin's call to prayer. She hears nothing at all.
Grandmother's wide hips sit atop cool sheets. She peels her white hijab from her her head. Droplets of perspiration cling piously to her forehead. She kneels down to roll her prayer rug and pushes it under the boxy bed frame. She is thirsty for a Marlboro and a Nescafé.
Baby girl with soft brown curls bounces inside her collapsible box. Ten tiny toes the size of un-soaked garbanzo beans stick to the warm plastic. She waits for her dead mother to bring a bottle of warm milk.
The Green Worm
I spied a ginormous green worm, flipped upside down,
suspended from the ceiling.
Shrouded tip to tip in shredded black, its body scavenged by a mob of midnight crawlers.
I cried for my mother to bring her broom. I cried for my mother to save her innocent. I cried for my mother in silent sobs.
Fear erupted in my mouth. I suffocated on unspoken syllables. I cried for my mother until she saved me from myself.