Momma Cat
momma cat is
sitting in my lap. Serenely vibrating. You’re next to me.
you say—jokingly, I suppose—I want to be
dead.
Startled. The cat stops purring. I can’t comprehend. You
Smile. I’m joking, you say. Supposedly. You want to be
run over.
You want an end. Why? I ask. You say, you wouldn’t understand.
And you’re right. I don’t. But those words are
embedded forever in
the cracks of my cerebellum. I worry. You coward behind
a smile. Words roll through my mind. A single song spinning
the track
constantly. Repeat. Repeat. I want to be dead. I asked God,
Allah, Shiva, Odin, Yama, even Zeus what to make
of the careless
world seen through your gray-eyes. I asked you. What do I do?
But you clawed, scratching for an out, Lost, like a needle in a
hay-filled truck
on an empty road. Searching for a wave from a passer-byer. But there’s no one
to comfort the forgotten son. The runt a grocery-store doorstep box of
kittens
leaves behind. I want to be dead. A joke, you said. Crouching
beneath a laugh, I suppose. You turned away and
screamed
at God, Allah, Shiva, Odin, Yama, even
Zeus. They didn’t hear you, did they? I guess not. And
alone
you cried, screaming into the sharp darkness.
A longing yowl, a desperate screech. You were alone,
without a mother.
No one there to attend to the screaming child. Voice lost in an empty
sky. You craved death. To be buried. Beneath everything terrible. But
where to put the body?
Somewhere nice? Somewhere to relax? Surrounded by
Nothing. Won’t that get lonely? Underground, all by yourself?
dogs often dig up
things they’re not supposed to. Do you think they’ll find you? Lost
as you are? Wherever you are. Living amongst
dead things,
dead as you are? I hope they find you. I hope someone
finds you. Where? I’m not sure. Somewhere.
Momma cat is
Silent. The cat stopped purring. I look at you. You smile—
jokingly, I suppose. Stay here, I whisper, I don’t want you to be
dead.