Sometimes I was the flame,
sometimes the singed wing
shivering through darkness. Shaking,
practising my tiny scales. Taking
the long abdomen of my short
life to a lit pane to batter, to burn.
At night, we rushed to open
our gifts. Pulse and eye of owls’
beats, moon’s glance white over
still pocket parks, slicing
prey’s lithe bodies, a great hunger
running the machinery of it all.
We gave away our days, slept
until dusk’s flutter. Craved
collision, mazed by what blazed.
It was night. We were burning
up, young. It was hard to say
who wanted, who made the harm.
From: Vol.12 N.01 – The Braided Gift
Bound
by
Felicity Plunkett
