Murder at the Poetry Conference

Melinda Smith

The old pesticide factory

casts a buzz-saw shadow

on the wall of the council chambers.

Inside, the poets sit like aldermen.

They talk of war and genocide,

harrowing themselves silly.

At night they retire to soft floral sheets, flocked wallpaper. They dream

infinite shelves of books with tilted spines –

M and N shapes staggering away;

leather the colour of blood.