
A seamstress working from home in the 90s
I barely know this wall, so new
wood dust drifts to the ground with each
chatter from the machine on the other
side. I rub my hand on plywood,
rough like miners’ calloused fingers.
I creep through to that room at the back
of the garage, ironclad with cold,
daylight forcing through a window,
grazing only walls, cobwebs
and bags brimming with hosiery.
Gripping the door handle, I watch—
glasses on the bridge of her nose,
hands steady in fingerless gloves,
breath billowing like clouds of steam—
until her red-rimmed eyes meet mine.

Robert Cutillo is a writer who explores dysfunctional relationships, family, childhood, loss, grief, loneliness, bullying, power and work life. His short story Blacksticks blue was recently published at Literally Stories. Robert also recently completed his MA in Creative Writing at the University of Derby. In his dissertation, he explored the negative effects neoliberalism is having on charities and the people they support, drawing on his own experiences of having worked in the sector.
