Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
#plagueofdoves
He clenches her throat,  Squeezing her jugular with abrasive, demanding hands,​ Hands that used to smell of flower stems and home.​ Those roses had long ago died,​ Seeped into the kitchen tiles. ​ Feminine hands search frantically, helplessly,​   She mumbles into his beat red face, Begging God for help. He dominates her, crushes her, blankets her in darkness.​ Vision blurs, blood pulses furiously to her head. ​ She tries to scream out the window,​ The door,​ The unseen skylight, Into the crowded streets.​ Everything looks normal from the outside,​ Shutters drawn just so, the chimney smoking seductively in whispers.​ Passenger's see the house as a sanctuary, a safe haven.​ Inside, the walls are beat,​ bloodied, and bruised, ​Displaying black and blue marks, ​ Harmonizing with her beautiful brown skin. ​ "I love you too much," he groans pushing deeper into her flesh,​ Forcing his bleached fingers into her tormented soul. ​ A soul that had been whole once,​ Before he came, before she let him take hold,​ Before he became God.​ She gasps as fluttering images invade her mind,​ Her daughters' precious smiles, brown curls,​ Cloaking her dark mind in light,​ Filtering through the clouds.​ Liquor breaks the mirage,​ Forcing her back into the present.​ He's pressing his swollen lips to her forehead,​ Soaking in her sober, filling his nostrils with her scent.​ He still looks beautiful.​ He looks like the man she married at 17. He looks God-like. ​ He is God. ​ Heartbeat slows, pulse un-rhythmically beats,​ Blackness devours her eyes, shutting out the perfectly formed home.​ All that's left is the soft giggles of her daughters'​ Echoing through her empty body.​ But, at least she sees angels.
0
May 5, 2017
May 5, 2017 at 3:35 PM UTC
It's her fault
He clenches her throat,  Squeezing her jugular with abrasive, demanding hands,​ Hands that used to smell of flower stems and home.​ Those roses had long ago died,​ Seeped into the kitchen tiles. ​ Feminine hands search frantically, helplessly,​   She mumbles into his beat red face, Begging God for help. He dominates her, crushes her, blankets her in darkness.​ Vision blurs, blood pulses furiously to her head. ​ She tries to scream out the window,​ The door,​ The unseen skylight, Into the crowded streets.​ Everything looks normal from the outside,​ Shutters drawn just so, the chimney smoking seductively in whispers.​ Passenger's see the house as a sanctuary, a safe haven.​ Inside, the walls are beat,​ bloodied, and bruised, ​Displaying black and blue marks, ​ Harmonizing with her beautiful brown skin. ​ "I love you too much," he groans pushing deeper into her flesh,​ Forcing his bleached fingers into her tormented soul. ​ A soul that had been whole once,​ Before he came, before she let him take hold,​ Before he became God.​ She gasps as fluttering images invade her mind,​ Her daughters' precious smiles, brown curls,​ Cloaking her dark mind in light,​ Filtering through the clouds.​ Liquor breaks the mirage,​ Forcing her back into the present.​ He's pressing his swollen lips to her forehead,​ Soaking in her sober, filling his nostrils with her scent.​ He still looks beautiful.​ He looks like the man she married at 17. He looks God-like. ​ He is God. ​ Heartbeat slows, pulse un-rhythmically beats,​ Blackness devours her eyes, shutting out the perfectly formed home.​ All that's left is the soft giggles of her daughters'​ Echoing through her empty body.​ But, at least she sees angels.
Continue reading...
42