Dogman/Wolfman/Transman

by Alistair Keay

Western Washington University

Alistair Keay (he/him) is a born-again yapper. And also a senior at Western Washington University.


I. 

I left my steadiness in last night’s late 
lunch, strained with limbs like lambs’ tails, 
nerves fire-working, wracking, wasting, 
machine hands in utero drawing me 
down this flight of stairs. Cold, 
basement corner and high beams of 
my brain, stool and lock-down, eye 
dazzle, chew on things just to spit 
-ball swallow down what cannot work 
its way above what’s wrapped around 
my throat. Bottom stair stare red- 
eye photo reflection, expectation of 
want mistaken for soul solely because 
it is easier. Oh, by God, it’s easier. 
Want what wants to harm me, 
because, by God, it’s easier. 

II. 

The other night dream of a metal vest 
man, I’m never me no exception, but a 
rotting thing voyeuristic, no different, I grew 
the fur they always seem to want 
and teeth they never seem to manage, 
just another wallet photo rag-tag image; 
portable, accessible, plausibly deniable,  
interest detachable, inside my throat retractable— 
eyes shut first for anything unasked, 
just taken. Take it. Flip a coin and beg it, 
bite down on what I wish I never had, 
machine-gun waking heartbeat be goddamned, 
fight or fly from someone else’s bed, 
sex-not-wet dream teacup dredge 
some meaning from the canines, jaw 
wire, evening dread, rub some salt inside  
the scab, bone shard blood rich iron mess,  
next impression, reach out and ignore that 
jagged edge, that baseless porcelain premonition 
sopping heap of spent leaf dregs, that 
lasting taste of rotting flesh, absolve 
what you want. Refuse what I c[am]n. 

III. 

There is glitter in the blood 
on the shower drain, dripping 
over my lips from where 
it had been warming my tongue, 
left stale and coagulated hours 
to remind me what it’s 
like to be (w)hole, which is to say 
it’s really just a ritual 
regurgitation purging the peach-pit 
replacing my heart, which is to say 
I reach to mirrors not to wipe the 
red from the corners of my mouth 
but to wonder what exactly I am  
missing, which is to say I meet my 
own eyes unable to read what  
may be behind them. I want 
to lick the salt from someone else’s 
tongue, rest their head on my sternum 
and listen to the irregularity scraping  
my ribs, ruin the latent require to 
keep myself quiet, sit and beg God 
for a world unwanting me small—  
and I am tired of feeling like less 
of a man because the thing in my 
brain-cage, the animal unoccupying 
my pants—my blood’s on the floor, 
to keep fate in my hands. 


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An Open Letter to Icarus