there's been no war here -
just a gathering of faith,
like blueberries in a basket,
pinpricks on a coffee-stained cross-country map.
I was there when the impossible wrenched itself from the uneven street
and threw itself at us,
I was the camera angle waiting behind borrowed pictures on the news,
I was collapsed and sobbing on an unsanded porch.
for years and years I loved you, sometimes half-hearted,
sometimes fierce and coarse as a brick,
and when we hugged I held you tight.
my hands are stained purple with our faith
like with bruises or wine or blood.
I want to strip the skin from my bones
so I can wash myself clean,
make room in every crevice of me for the memories of you
so when I'm dying with the disease of the future
in one hundred years
I'll still recall the cadence of your smile,
your pale thin hands in the summer heat.
sometimes too late at night,
I feel like I'm drowning in the dirty blackened river water
of our faith, I feel the acid on my tongue
and I fall apart like grains of salt.
I let lime juice fall on the skinned knees of our faith and see if we scream.
we have been tested.
found to be young and still venomous with grief, dangerous,
wrung out and crying,
yet the sky still calm
and the roads still smooth
and the clouds still quick and thin.
and still I remember when we sang as we walked,
peering round corners, clutching absent at our necks,
through the heavy doors of home.
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