Drip.
Ah, shit. There’s blood on my exam script, and no, I’m not being poetic. I’m not talking about the long history of colonialism and classism that went into my arrival at this moment in this university in this city in this country, I’m talking about the blood on the piece of paper in front of me.
I raise my hand. Someone tries to hand me another booklet, because of course that’s what any student must need, but no, “can I have a tissue please?” Of course we’re not allowed to bring in our own.
The invigilator looks at me, and scurries away.
I look a sight. There’s blood under my left nostril, always the left, but it’s not just blood, is it? It’s mucus, too, crawling slowly down over my lip. Disgusting. And there’s mucous blood on my essay, and it’ll take a minute for the tissue to arrive and I have to keep writing, and bleeding, and writing. The girl at the table next to me keeps glancing at me. You must not do anything to disturb other candidates.
Well, I’ve broken that rule before.
It was tears, that time, not blood. I was nineteen, and my friend was dying, and I was stuck in Oxford, taking exams, and I cried into the paper of my short text commentary and left the ink slightly blurry. I write in biro now, but still I write neatly around the spots of red on the page. I learn from my mistakes.
I’ve put literal blood and tears into my degree. The sweat will come in hour six of my Tuesday exams.
I hand in a bloodstained booklet at the end of three hours with the taste of metal in my mouth.





