We rocked you to sleep under cushions of burnt frankincense, your rosemary plum lips glowing beneath the glass shutter, as our warm, fluttering fingers smoothed the polished edges of your velvet mahogany. Odes of voices, soft as the powdery scent of dried roses, were wordlessly strung into half-convinced rhapsodies of "but it was painless", and as if from the fragmented lens of an abstract camera, the pews streamed in, black and white, woven hushes, broken ***** sighs, as we poured through glazed photos of your enraptured memory lanes, how you burst through black winter days like a firecracker, your young blood blossoming as a scarlet primrose upon alabaster. Our preacher (who once prayed for my cat which then died and said it was God's plan) professes of your rapturous gaiety in the angels' hideaways, but my aunt stopped preparing family meals without a husband, and your wet sapphire eyes, like the violet blankets of daffodil pods, only glisten at us from shrouded, opalescent moons, stray and far, transfiguring into vacant mirrors, shaded from reach.