Rust on the duvet, thick and red and oxygenated with disuse. Somewhere, there’s a baby crying for milk, yelling from all the apartment walls; domestic arguments, pain painted over with a fresh coat, cotton sheets closeted with fire, something red (again). Hands, gripping, arching in isolated agony, the woman in the bed is only a woman in a bed. Tomorrow the pain may subside with ibuprofen and heat, but tonight it boils over like a cauldron, like a curse between the legs. Rust chips away at the milk softness. A knife could slice right through and nothing would change. There’s no point changing the sheets again.
From a portfolio I wrote in third year of university, titled 'Infestation'.