We were dying of thirst, clamouring amongst each other to lick the spit of women like mothers’ milk, we cried out, begging for resolution, for water in the drought.
Our lives were shattered, children screaming for the since-dried milk of nourishment, women sobbing upon small corpses.
God, we cried.
And then you came, a gift amongst the flint; we had long since found fire but you taught us how to put it out.
It ached in the milk-light of our bones, a flowing stream and tablets carved of testaments, of commandments that spoke of how we were destroying the earth, how repentance is simply not enough.
And god, we cried, we cleansed our sins, and we cried for water, and you brought it to us.
Legs spread, Mother Mary holding women close, the only sacrament worthy of sacrifice. Men falling in useless battles, and women bringing water to the dead.
We found a stream. We drank.
Mother Mary sunk wide, and god, we drank.
From a collection of poetry I wrote for a creative writing portfolio in second year of university, titled 'New Rugged Cross'.