Ode to the Famous Taxidermy Winged Kitten

Sarah Belli

“The Famous Taxidermy Winged Kitten” art by Viktor Wynd

Why would someone steal you?
I ask, your mouth wide, waiting for a scream to shrivel
the matted fur, discolored like a rotting orange plucked,  
left on my counter. I’d put it in my mouth, an orange slice
molding between my cheeks, hoping it will breathe 
if I suck hard enough. Breathe through pulp, blowing
a syncopation into your feathers, make you fly;  
fly with toothless fear and stapled wings, a mockery of conscious,  
no clawing just fur hair-sprayed like my grandma’s 
growing hat collection. My grandma’s hats could 
make a kitten scream, they make her scream through the rasp
of chemo. I shouldn’t speak ill of the dead, but even in her once 
limp blood-clotted body, she wished she could steal  
your stolen wings from your stolen body 
and sew a stagnant flight into the baldness of her back.

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