A poetry journal of everyday clippings |
| I still hear the music of her fingers tapping numbers; she does not comprehend who the child is. First, I stare long at her, without blinking, while the shimmer of a distant light from her hair--the blonde smudge on burnt umber--writhes to infiltrate my retina, mismatching the frail blossoms, rather the thistles, of young years. My tongue, burning, tastes ginger, the hidden roots of evil, and I laugh out loud with repetition, pointing a finger at her. Look, who's the tyrant now! Not good manners, but revenge is sweet, and this is the woman my father ran away with. --------------------------- For "Poets' Practice Pad" Prompt: Write a poem about a cashier. |