BPR 47 | 2020
The face beneath your face is older, stranger, 
crushed and battered, ready to emerge. 
And under that, no face at all. I call it 
childhood, because I recollect so little, 
and in my closet, when my mother died, 
I found a skull I loved, phosphorescent 
and therefore deadly, alive with whatever 
shine it hoarded. It smelled of sulfur then, 
like my great aunt who asked if I loved Jesus, 
then held my hand in the bones of hers. 
I feared her in ways I feared no death. 
I was just a boy after all, my skull a toy. 
And when it glowed, it shed the stuff of angels 
and ice. Before a darkness took it back.



