STILL LIFE

The bullet has almost entered the brain:

I can feel it sprint down the gun barrel,

rolling each bevel around like a hoop

on a pigslide of calibrated steel and oil.

Now it whistles free and aloft

in that ice-cold millimeter of air,

then boils as the first layer of skin

shales off like ragged leaves of soap.

The trigger’s omnipresent click

makes triggers all over the body fire.

Now it tunnels through palisades,

veins, arteries, white corpuscles

red and battered as swollen ghosts,

cuts the struts on a glacial bone

jutting out like the leg of a single flamingo,

feints and draws in close for the kill,

egged on by a mouse-gray parliament of cells.