Some nights, I dream of my father's fists, or the blue-green color of his eyes and how they watered, became oceans, when he'd had too much to drink.
There was a galaxy inside of him, a great, gravitational mass. He opened his mouth and swallowed worlds; became a death-eater, teeth biting down into a swollen black tongue.
When I was a fetus, I felt him pulling, so I gnawed my way out of my mother's womb. Covered in her blood, I met my adversary. I dove into the sea to stare him down, but could scarcely remember my amniotic swimming.
I drowned. My lungs filled with the emptiness of space, and for ages I floated, unmoored, drifting by stars forever unimpressed with me.
One day, the universe will collapse, time flying backwards toward its end. I will see him as he was when he was new, a stardust embryo not touched by awfulness. I will know what it means to love.