 
Dysmorph by 
  Brendan McCarthy
                     I scrape off your face,                      
  
  
    your plastic smile,
  
  
  
    like tooth decay.
  
  
  
    Through the cavity hole 
  
  
  
    I press on the wormy tangle 
  
  
  
    of upchucked nightmares 
  
  
  
    and leftover words,
  
  
  
    but those nerves are too spent
  
  
  
    to carry electricity. 
  
  
  
    The impulse floats
  
  
  
    like a dead fish in a murky pond. 
  
  
  
    The yellow, fermenting pus 
  
  
  
    of your resignation
  
  
  
    stains my gloved fingers,
  
  
  
    And it reeks of abandoned theaters 
  
  
  
    turned squatter houses. 
  
  
  
    You’re but a wrinkled mask
  
  
  
    stretched over a swamp,
  
  
  
    bubbling with rot. 
  
  
  
    Your screams gargle like clogged drains.
  
  
  
    Your gums are mush,
  
  
  
    no bone, no story. 
  
  
  
    All we can do for you is cover the gray ruin deep down 
  
  
  
    with a waxy ruin,
  
  
  
    and hope for a good embalmer. 
  
  
   
    
    
    
        Published on May 02, 2023 08:42