poem25 Apr 2021 05:46 pm
Anne Carly Abad
I should have held back. You sat there, mouth ajar by the staircase while your father caught shards of insult I threw at him. I thought you’d cry but you clenched your mouth shut; could have sworn the clinks were glass shattering. 'Milk, honey?' I asked. You shook your head. You’ve turned three but you don’t walk and your father still smiles like I didn't just call him an idiot (He forgot to lock the door again at night.) You mumble, 'Mommy, sleep.' So I carry you. You're light as paper. (Maybe you just haven’t had enough to eat.) And your bed isn’t it too big for you? (Have you always been this tiny?) Your arms and legs curl up into knots. Your skin hardens like the crust on a pretzel. Somehow, you wriggle out of my grasp and burrow deep deep into the sheets. The white cast has left your skin. But you haven’t grown horns. They say beetle larva gorge on much sap and rot so as to need less food in adulthood. You just need to grow those horns and you could lift a thousand times your own weight! I have to stop counting the years. I keep the light open for you.