- 2020 Volume 15
Poetry
I lift a perforated screen from the rectangular prism.
I peer through the thick, cloudy glass of the lizards’ tank. My pupils
Dilate as I peer into four geckos’ veiny eyes. Their pupils
Expand as ours meet. Unlike a camera lens changing
Its aperture, like a venus fly trap opening its teeth to swallow.
My tentative fingers shakily squeeze pink tweezers.
Brown, tan, and black worms fall in front of the lizards.
Luna’s farsighted eyes adjust to focus on the meal in front of her toes,
Her head cocks side to side while the worm’s head digs
Into the sand. Not like a dog pawing the ground, getting dirt in its nails.
A halibut swallowing itself into the floor, attempting to camouflage.
The gecko’s triangular nose collides with the ground,
The worms find themselves surrounded by tiny, sharp teeth.
The teeth break apart the worm’s outer shell,
Looking less like my little sister licking a lollipop,
An eagle penetrating and snapping a crab’s soft carcass.
The pupae’s insides turn to its outsides: mush.
It slides down their small throats to a dark, warm pool,
Unlike a child at a waterpark, these tiny pools are filled with acid.