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Adrift.

She had not known fear

until she could no longer

see the shore.

Drifting in alien waters

she felt pangs,

like butterfly wings,

against the inside of

her ribcage.

The fluttering, building hollow

that hope makes in it's

death throes.

When you enter the ocean

she heard her grandfather say

you enter the food chain.

The lazy, lapping drift

which brought her ever

farther into the empty sea

would have been soothing

in very different conditions.

Her eyes raked the clouds

searching out the signs

of bird flight.

She was suddenly at the

dawn of seafaring with

early man and his silent gods.

Looking for hope in

the blue void above.

She wondered idlely

whatever became of the

lifeboats from sunken ships

when the coast guard or

someone else pulls the

survivors free of them.

Would she, if she kept floating on

encounter them on the high seas

like a salvation graveyard?

She tried to think

of ways to stay out of the sun

but images of headstones

flocked like an armada

stalking the sea forever

growing but staying

impossibly empty always

pressed down on her.

She too was adrift.

Maybe she'd been headed

that way all her life.

Hard to say.

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p
Written by
paul-glottaman
40 / American
Published
Nov 25, 2021
Lines·Words
48·202
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