For Finlee,

by | Mar 25, 2022 | Poetry

A poem for Finlee.

 

Death has a way of changing you, of changing your perspective. Death of a child changes how a person looks at life. Witnessing and knowing death young often means a child loses their innocence, the very essence of childhood. A rose-tinted world they look through becomes tinged with grey and they become all the more aware of shadows and the heaviness of experience often reserved for adulthood.

 

 

it wasn’t a pretty grey

when you left that Saturday.

not the grey before dawn,

but the darkly waiting clouds

holding back river drops

as i brushed the leaves,

not my face.

 

swept them away,

from my vision like window-wipers, rain.

brushed the damp debris

of a wet driveway,

a highway for one family

with no child.

 

waiting since Wednesday

restless, deep and buried

a writhing dread lay nesting,

hatching snakelings in my chest.

 

i fed them

 

injecting myself their venom

to my insides

numbing vessels, tunnels

collapsing internal walls

 

until constrictors they became.

 

consuming me they grew,

squeezing,

intestines and young lungs.

 

and gripping tightly,

like a vice,

drew more carbon to my blood.

 

no oxygen

 

left ringing in my ears

post the call said you had left.

flesh had lost, they said,

your body spent your breath.

 

on the fight for host

between leech and growing bones

the leech,

a bone-dissolver,

won.

 

and like nothing,

you were left

on that day.

that Saturday.

 

on that overcast, grey morning

was the day, a child died.