π³πππππππ π³ππππ£
π»πππππΓ©, πΓ’ππππππΓ©, ππππ πππππππΓ©
Every now and then, I allow myself to imagine my grandparents having sex. The erotic
cinema version. That is, I focus on the lighting. Where it's catching, or if there is any at all.
In the beginning, I was just staring into a void. Their black and white skins were molting
together under satin sheets of absolute darkness. My dad never mentioned the specific
circumstances of their brief encounter during the war, that forbidden blip that throttled our
dynasty of mulatto bastards into being. But every time I peer into that void, something
pertinacious shudders within the ancestral attic. A dusty light with no name flicks on.
Maybe an oil lamp. Their shadows are dissolving into a floral pattern lining shelled out walls. I
can tell the room isn't hers. She wouldnβt risk sneaking un soldat noir, allied or not, under the
nose of her comrades in the resistance. And besides, the walls of her home were already
waterlogged with fallen soldiers.
Maybe explosions. Outside, the floral patterns vogue into a spring thicket into which theyβve
crawled to build a loverβs nest. Victory Day is only weeks away. Flashes of brilliance are
dancing across their teeth playing bittersweet jazz.
Whatever it is, it's not a bright lightβbut it's doing the most: It's catching in the mirror of their
eyes.
I try to examine my reflection more closely, but the glass is already rotting into infinity: the
hour, what they whispered, in which languageβest-ce qu'elle a dit βouiβ? Tangles of hyphae
emerge from between the shards, slowly fermenting photons and phonemes into an opaque
liquid, on which the beloved bastards of tomorrow will suckle.
Every now and then, I allow myself imagine what it tastes like.
Danielle is a writer currently living in Tioβtia:ke/Montreal. With loved ones spread across four continents, her writing often addresses themes of movement, homesickness, and beyond-human kinship. Sheβs deeply inspired by posthumanism, feminist horror, somatics, and sick bass lines. Her poetry has been published in 50 Shades of Black, PRISM international, and la Guillotine.