The morning after I killed him we sat eating breakfast at the kitchen counter.
The father, pupils on the tabloid which would later
leak with the news of his youngest child's departure.
The mother, upstairs, applying the swish of crimson,
a shade she'll rename blood of son before too long.
I won't go into specifics. But it was simple, really. The fingers first,
flaccid, then the arms like sticks of broken chalk, then the slump,
static, as if a switch from on to off, or a plug wrenched out.
Everything was normal. You did not suspect. I posted you
his glasses a week after, wrote the note left-handed. And yet
you did not suspect but walked numbly, shaking hands,
even the hand of the man who severed his breaths.
Written: March 2019. Explanation: A poem written in my own time. Not based on real events. Feedback welcome. A link to my Facebook writing page can be found on my HP home page.