New Mother

A week after our child was born,

you cornered me in the spare room

and we sank down on the bed.

You kissed me and kissed me, my milk undid its

burning slipknot through my nipples,

soaking my shirt. All week I had smelled of milk,

fresh milk, sour. I began to throb:

my sex had been torn easily as cloth by the

crown of her head, I’d been cut with a knife and

sewn, the stitches pulling at my skin – and the

first time you’re broken, you don’t know

you’ll be healed again, better than before.

I lay in fear and blood and milk

while you kissed and kissed me, your lips hot and swollen

as a teenage boy’s, your sex dry and big,

all of you so tender, you hung over me,

over the nest of the stitches, over the

splitting and tearing, with the patience of someone who

finds a wounded animal in the woods

and stays with it, not leaving its side

until it is whole, until it can run again.