I came crashing into the stained glass window Of your baptist church on a balmy Tuesday evening. Its wings batted and rattled against the Rigid kaleidoscope wall while you prayed your sins Away while no one was looking. But my primitive eyes dilated through your bones And you felt my gaze as the incessant stinging sensation on the small of your back, The same space my hand once occupied hours before you made the decision to make me a bird, To swish me away with the back of your hand. My stare hardened until you squirmed like a newborn Under the beating fluorescents of your worship, Begging for reprieval, But not even God's light could forgive you now.