Sweat drenches
my body.
I push,
grind my teeth
against pain
I don’t feel.
I am given
a tiny form,
naked and wet,
whose sweet face
I don’t see.
I wake at night,
my breasts heavy,
in response to a cry
I don’t hear.
It’s a boy.
I know somehow.
I had a boy.
And he needs to be fed.
I see the bassinet
on the side of my bed,
shrouded by the darkness
of night.
I reach
and the odd
sensation of
disconnection
fades
as the morning light
brushes aside
the shadowed vision
in my mind.
I grope, in vain,
for the memory
of my son.
But the sun
and its
wicked light
forces me
to see
the
emptiness
by my bed.