Yes, I’ve delivered my hips 

to the mechanic for revision, 

sir. 

Metal on skin. 

 

Grit is the explanation for our existence: 

the insanity of hands, 

this free market 

of submission. 

 

Yes, 

sir, 

I carefully fold my yin every morning. 

I’ve left it in the linen closet, 

beneath the nappies 

and vacuum bags. 

 

Sometimes I forget it’s even there. 

 

But these sins you’ve listed, 

sir, 

which is crimson? 

 

Skin? 

Melody? 

Wilderness? 

 

Perhaps it’s my familiarity with the river, 

the violet curves of my yearning. 

 

They’ve called me many names: 

wicked 

dangerous

unpainted. 

 

Unfit for business ownership. 

 

I’ll take whatever label you choose, 

sir, 

if it makes it easier 

for your paperwork 

to contain me. 

 

But just listen,

sir:

I need no pagination,

no stakeholders. 

I flow 

like atoms […]

in the spaces 

between 

your collocations. 

 

No, 

sir, 

I am not complacent. 

 

The mechanic says my body needs breaking, 

for I am not shattered enough. 

 

All it takes is a vocabulary 

to shackle my imagination:

 

My father’s last name. Catcalls. 

Proxy bids on my fingers. Screens, 

loading. Screens, flashing. Screens, 

capturing, fragmenting, pigmenting 

any loose-fitting liberty, any lavender 

expression of divinity. 

 

Move quickly, break things. 

 

But just listen to me, 

sir – 

 

this isn’t the world we birthed. 

 

The lilies have wilted. 

The yellow bird isn’t singing. 

The spring of my body is buried 

beneath the fists of your industry. 

 

My curves aren’t written in your histories. 

 

Be indignant. Be wary. 

Be weary, worn, wide-eyed, 

worried. 

Be concerned. 

 

Be ready. 

 

There’s a crack in my bathroom window, 

sir. 

Alabaster. 

 

An opening. 

 

The neighbors have brought home their baby – 

Mary, named after her mother’s mother 

who sold her lashes for candlewax […]

to pay her taxes. 

 

She didn’t keep the receipt. 

 

There are tragedies that cannot be filed, 

sir. 

Our bodies hold a capital 

we cannot claim. 

 

The phone rings. 

 

Your hips will be ready for pick-up this Wednesday, miss. 

Please bring your ID. 

 

Next door, 

the baby cries. 

 

Let them try to silence her, 

sir. 

Just let them try.