With never a thought for the shadow of corrosion nor the fertile breeding ground of eel slime and rabbit guts, we took adventure’s companion: the pocket-knife, and sliced our thumbs. A fragment of pain much less than its apprehension; to watch the rubyed jewel of life swell then run to kiss the earth with salty gravity. Pressing our thumbs together, blood into blood, we made a symbol of our bond.
This was a time when blood was blood and not more virulent than rats in Renaissance Europe. When “Magic” Johnson was a messiah. When dentists and doctors probed with impunity. Before plasma was a Trojan Horse for haemophiliacs.
Now even the mosquito’s drone assails our mortality yet we are loath to shipwreck its cargo of strange blood. The body once a temple now a fortress. But what is to be our vigilance when the enemy lies within?
Copyright Andrew M. Bell. The poet would like to acknowledge Micropress New Zealand (which unfortunately has ceased as a publication) in whose pages this poem first appeared.
I first wrote this poem in 1993 when *** and AIDS were very much in the global consciousness. The world's media has long since moved on to other tragedies and disasters, but *** and AIDS have not gone away. Millions of people, especially in Africa, still die from ***/AIDS.