Afterbirth
Second child is branded daughter. Vulvae coated in gothic
fluids and brine dressing her skull. Nimble, an infant’s sinuses
reach out and tilt the sun into her gums. Spittle, retching
bulging, spooled from resin; fangs grasping at a fallen
pinecone. A nurse with bruised eyelids swabs moon-shadow
underneath her molars. White-swathed uniform, lime
bowler hat. Stethoscope unravelling from moleskin. A study
adapts the role of furnace, breeding brethren into starlight.
I was born teething on betel leaf, immolating scuffed
sneaker- soles on turf. Child of industrialism, sipping lighter
fluid out of a dentist’s day cup. Caramel choking on my
braces: a flash of violet, growing up with the taste
of a ruffian’s embers on my tongue. I cough up my incisors
into a bedside container. Paint the oak red. Sear my knuckles
hurt. Bite my lip bloody, and blind the metal’s aftertaste.
My rosary stained, its beads breaking by the wayside.
I learn that rough edges bleed quickly. That splinters are
to be pulled back, jabbed at with a sob. So a grave,
becomes a belly, becomes a child; clawing herself
into the earth. So a midwife is a passage to godhood.
This bay, is where a city’s daughters come of age, breathing
cigarette smoke into a storefront promenade. This sand,
is where a godmother shapes her nipping progeny.
This land, is where a fledgling urchin takes flight.