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She smiled awkwardly, too young to drink, And I wondered was this her first time, As her muddled words tumbled out,     “It’s not bad news.” She looked at me, half-expectantly, Like a child on Christmas morning, And I wondered was she silently Counting to 8, or 10, or the exact seconds Some think-tank had determined was Right, under the circumstances.     “Do you want to see the body?” I shook my head, as the image Of my father, ever a thin man in life, Sat up on a gurney, bare-chested, Wired up to bleeping machines, Flooded my inner eye.  That was The last time I saw him, and the Last time I ever would, and that Is how I always remember him.
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Nov 17, 2017
Nov 17, 2017 at 5:36 PM UTC
Not Bad News
She smiled awkwardly, too young to drink, And I wondered was this her first time, As her muddled words tumbled out,     “It’s not bad news.” She looked at me, half-expectantly, Like a child on Christmas morning, And I wondered was she silently Counting to 8, or 10, or the exact seconds Some think-tank had determined was Right, under the circumstances.     “Do you want to see the body?” I shook my head, as the image Of my father, ever a thin man in life, Sat up on a gurney, bare-chested, Wired up to bleeping machines, Flooded my inner eye.  That was The last time I saw him, and the Last time I ever would, and that Is how I always remember him.
tryst
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Nov 17, 2017
Nov 17, 2017 at 5:36 PM UTC
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