Leslie Anne Mcilroy
Abattoir
What is done is fodder,
no longer food, but a mill
where cows eat sawdust
and the air reeks of something
slaughtered in the shop over the hill,
where memories of blood are not
memories; they are now and bleeding.
I thought I told you about the large man
and his small penis. I thought I told you
I don’t like to say no. I thought I told you
I love animals so much I would die for them.
You say you don’t understand, as if my life
was a language you were trying to learn.
I show you a cut, curtsy when you touch
me there, scream like a wired rabbit.
You can’t possibly know and I can’t
possibly tell you how much I savor
the small mammal moves
my body makes when it finally
bites back,
how it feels to leave a scar.
Other work by Leslie Anne Mcilroy