1. Your specimen: the cat. He lies, a stretched out blob of whirring, whizzing particles: You can’t see them – he can.
2. His fur is dried old carpet left out on a front lawn: homeless, floorless; waiting to be claimed.
3. His eyes are blank marbles flicked by sticky fingers in a game. You won them by cheating, and stole them but they turned to mush in your hands, they fell through your fingers, and stained them with purple: it would not wash off. It grew: an omnipresent reminder trickling down your arms, pooling at your elbows.
4. You raise the scalpel: it is a crescent moon speckling down to illicit behaviour below.
5. The portraits on the walls applaud when you make the first CUT. and reveal the gooey caramel dripping, circulating, inside. It sticks to the blade, forming clumps of purple that harden to a crystallised-honey form.
6. Later you sleep with the cat; he lies on your bed and purrs (does he purr?) and you label the jars: “Dissection 15”.