August 19, 2025

Your Body Is a Wolf

Photo by Steve on Pexels.com

It starts with a tearing—quiet at first, like silk splitting in the dark—and then the howl builds in your spine, in your teeth, in the wet hinge of your jaw. You bite your pillow, your tongue, your lover’s shoulder. You bleed without knowing where from. People say you’re glowing, but they mean you’re dangerous. They mean you smell like something that could survive winter. You sleep with the window open even in February. You growl in your sleep. You are not soft anymore. You want to eat the moon and then barf it up just to say you did. You apologize for the claw marks in the hallway wall. You try to cage it. You try hot showers and cold Chardonnay. But the wolf does not care what you try. The wolf lives in the marrow, in the cells dedicated to your shame. You dress it up in your nicest jeans. You take it to work. You sign emails with “Best,” even when you want to sign them with blood. And still the wolf scratches, pacing the inside of your ribs, waiting for the one night you let it out.

About the Author

Mathieu Parsy Mathieu Parsy is a Canadian writer who grew up on the French Riviera. He now lives in Toronto and works in the travel industry. His writing has appeared or is forthcoming in publications such as BULL, Bending Genres, Maudlin House, Does It Have Pockets, and elsewhere. Follow him on Instagram at @mathieu_parsy.

Related Flash
Woman in silhouette near the Taj Mahal

Once in our home in Agra, the monsoon was over

By Tara Isabel Zambrano

“we took off our PJs, and became the afternoon—our earlobes and neck, our limbs and nails turning pink from the syringe of the sun, asphalt gritting our feet, downstairs our mothers calling our names circled red with curses…”

Someone scratching a lottery ticket with a penny

Snowbirds

By Pete Prokesch

“I never liked Ramon. I felt like he knew all the winners. And the lucky ones weren’t for me.”

fashion woman countryside clothes

The Fence is Always Hungry

By Claudia Monpere

We feed it raw chicken three times a day, but it is never enough. The fence is always changing.

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This