Five leaves cup a tender flower, petals layered over petals; deep inside, seedlings not yet conceived are protected by the blanket of crimson velvet, reminiscent of a vellux quilt: Perfection that begs to be touched.
A sharp needle in the finger; and a deep red liquid blossoms. The same color grows from stem and wound. The edges of the silken petals curl back. Red matures, rusts to black, breaking up --
What has happened?
You scissored the stem, changed the water each day, crushed the aspirin, just like Grandma said; still, the last petals are floating to the ground; the leaves droop over the cracked glass table: Only the thorns remain.