Flesh
“Who shall give us flesh to eat?”—Numbers 11:4, King James Bible
I wake up hungry.
When I look into the mirror, I see a shriveled
corpse looking back—sunken eyes embedded
in a mass of wrinkles; a skeleton with a shrug
of skin, carelessly flung over bones. Strands of
hair still clinging to my scalp. The dog whines
and runs with tail tucked into his belly. Stumble
out of room, down the hall. My hand, a
tortured claw of sinew and bone,
grapples with the white handle of the fridge.
The meats go first—the cold cuts,
the three day old pot roast, the fetid
baloney that only the dog will eat. Use my
nails to shred them all into swallowable bites.
But then it becomes too slow, the act of shredding a
hindrance, and I stuff bigger and bigger pieces
down my throat, choking them down.
Then the dairy—an entire wheel of brie cheese
with the pale waxy skin, and blocks of butter
waterfall it all down with
orange juice and milk,
and then eat the plastic cartons. The plastic is not
unpleasant going down. In fact, I enjoy the crunch.
Empty. Emptiness in spasms, in waves,
with skin stretched like dead things receding into
earth, this broken frame, and jutting concave ribs,
and
this need,
this need,
this need.
Shaking, I reach for the eggs, swallow them one by one.
I leave the fruits and vegetative shit for last—insubstantial air.
The front door opens, my wife calls out a tentative hello,
perhaps she sees the dog pissing itself by the door,
and I turn, double-fisting a jar of mayo, a jar of pickles,
turn to her voice and say, “I’m in the kitchen.”