“Cat Song” by Emma Johnson-Rivard

The cat believes I sleep in the wrong times 
and the wrong ways. Never in sun, never
with a belly full of meat or blood
between the teeth. Once she attacked my workstation, 
relentless—all tooth and 
strife, she would have bled it 
if it bled. She would conquer kings if her bones 
were proportional to her beast. She has no notion 
of rent or health insurance or that we live 
under the ceremony of capitalism 
and someone else’s god. This matters little when 
she brings me live, unbroken mice—wise cat mother to 
tall, stupid daughter—and waits expectantly 
for the blood and afterward, in the sun, 
her place settled
upon my hip. 

Emma Johnson-Rivard lives in Maryland where she writes poetry and weird fiction. Her work has appeared in Fearsome Critters, Coffin Bell, Moon City Review, and others.