its translucent honey-color is an axolotl's eye looking into me
and, like a cortázar story, little by little, my bourbon axolotl steals my body, its soul stealing through my eyes to evict me from this honestly-not-that-well-kept apart ment
and i feel my bourbon axolotl eye replacing me as i am drawn out into its glass prison
and i stare up as my bourbon turns me gently in my glass as my bourbon raises me to its lips sips me no longer winces or even registers any emotion on a calm-liquid-surface face eyes wet and flat and blank as a tumbler ******* deep
and i don't know where i'm going or what i'm becoming but this feeling of spiraling and draining and emptying is everything that i know
and there is less and less of me as bourbon stares down cold unsmiling neat and silently consumes me and i am disappearing and i am gone
and bourbon stands, calm, but not serene, and bourbon walks to my car, each step carefully measured, and bourbon drives my car to my apartment and bourbon sleeps in my bed and goes to my job and collects my paycheck and bourbon falls into habit and routine and bourbon feels my empty.
but having a body, a life, is better than being trapped in bottles and glasses it's probably better, anyway
and bourbon won't go back, won't trade flesh back for silica, will keep living unfeeling behind glass-eye walls until skin and sinew unknit
and bourbon is so alien and content that it never wonders if there is anything more, never despairs for its ending road, treasures every drop
bourbon calls this body, this life top shelf
bourbon knows that **** ain't cheap
magical realism drinking poem partially inspired by a short story