|Swing|

262 51 92
                                    

His father saddled him up

To the shiny, broken garden swing

And pushed him up and down until

He laughed.

Laughed pink and beautiful.

His father didn't listen

As he broke into tearful sweat

It wasn't his fault

That his son went and bruised himself.

He laughed.

Laughed black and torn.

His father poured himself another glass

As his drooping lids drank in

A mother moping with cuts as big as voracious precipices

And a son,

With the only bandage he could find

Looking for the ugliest wound

On her paper-thin body.

He laughed.

Laughed bright and gaping.

His father looked the other way

As a boy who used to be his son

Stuttered out of the closet

And grovelled at his feet

In tears.

He never wanted a son.

He laughed.

Laughed slurring and childlike.

Laughed as his son

Looked at the creaking swing in the garden

And got an idea.

He saddled himself up

On the shiny, scarlet binding rope

Fixed his eyes upon his father's sleeping body

His mother's sleeping body

Both of which would sleep forever.

He looked at their photos on the wall

Through the shimmering salt in his eyes.

He looked at his favorite doll, his favorite toothbrush, his favorite everything

And swung.

Swung like the shiny, broken garden swing.

This time,

He wouldn't see himself laugh.

Blots Where stories live. Discover now