On this lowly night,
in the middle of the earth,
the cold wind howls,
and the pale-ish moon eavesdrops as
the mother of my great, great grandmother holds
a conversation with me.
Soul to soul we rapport,
shedding flesh and puffing blood.
“The ol’ days,” she begins,
“I was a dog licking sand
and eating maggots wherever I saw.
I bore in tens and tens
and rubbed my face with
the blood of my uterus
when my pups became merchandise.”
I puff blood into the air.
We growl and laugh.
She continues,
“Wasn’t I a good mooing cow
who milked and milked
and turned blood cream
when her breasts sagged and bruised?
I became beef before long.
Sweet, sweet beef
butchered unevenly, and dispersed abroad.
I bet the earth had a good meal.”
We growl maniacally, puffing and splintering,
whimpering and whining.
I see her soul stand up, dust her feet
and walk a distance.
She takes a quick look back at
my black bones shattered on the surface.
And in admiration, she mutters,
“Don’t you look so much like me?”

Pleasant Nneoma Stephen is a poet, student, and writing coach. She is an ardent lover of doodles, rainfall, and African mythology. Pleasant is a Gold Award recipient of the Senior Category of the Queen’s Commonwealth Essay Competition 2023. Her work, “Body of the Moon,” is forthcoming in Literary Forest Magazine.
