i bet she rues the moment god fashioned her out of his hollow ribs and him, out of the twigs breaking under her careless, tiny feet when she was fourteen.
hollow and broken, the walls fall all over me like ancient, perishing twin cities and lot’s wife never looks back; the angels never look back — i crack like a lightless dawn that wants to disappear but my brother has started to look like me — wearing an all too familiar silence, an all too familiar sadness wrapped around his neck like a cursed talisman. my sister’s wrists are exposed; i check for bitterness, and cigarettes, and boys — maybe i hid them better and held them tighter away until i was pale and white as a ghost i longed to be,
hollow and broken, the walls fall; the door flings open.
i no longer have to hide my wrists, but i crouch to a cluttered corner of my room. every sudden movement, every unchanging voice, and i bow my head low for my father to pour his beer, like a baptism of the heathen who accepts the words of god.
my mother’s wounds shine like biblical relics kept in my body — too fragile and small but i was not made for the word of god who calls himself by my father’s name.