BPR 47 | 2020
In the dark, the records were turning 
dead wax into static—its fine blue 
light, the music below its hiss.
The basement curled 
into itself like a segmented worm.
Once my body was a room for rent:
one word and then another 
burrowed in the hollow stomach. 
              The children were asleep;
                      the stereo turned low. 
The basement wavered before
retracting its unmeasurable body into the night’s
wet sand. It had been months. It had 
                      been years. How many? 
I could not count. But still,
this body within a body— 
a fish tank and a ragworm.
In the basement, I turned as if a metal spindle
were lodged within. The dark, 
like a needle, dragged 
across me—its diamond tip,
barbarous. Static seeped 
out of the speakers like a tail, no,
an entire body. It curled around me.



