I’ve thought about what absolution will feel like in the dark, how forgiveness will sound in my hands, the smell of clemency in the morning, and where the sun sits in the palm of a man who hasn’t let himself get used to anything.
I’ve thought about the resound of effusive, earnest prayers when I finally mean them, what the poem will look like when it escapes its cage, and how the night will unfurl its sparks then shatter stars along the promenade.
I’ve thought about what would happen if I stepped on his face and kept going– if I’d hear any bone-snap. I’ve imagined how fun it’d be to drown his gaze in its own reflection, to be the echo he chokes on. In my night-struck existence, I’d giggle while he stumbled around, a charred-orange wreck, a muted-barb affect.
I’d plug his mouth with a sharp-edged, holy silence so that the next girl stands a chance; so she won’t be gouged into a ghost, all violent and vanquished, a lacerated light who still has a soul to save.
If I cut his lungs with a poem, would it be a mercy killing? Like a priest praying for his own death, would I be breaking the sacrament? I’m still consuming a body; a different kind of lamb.
Could I slice into his side and crawl back into his rib, hold the pulpit, perform my own liturgy, and seize the forgiveness that wasn’t offered? Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned- Deliver me, Father, my light has dimmed.