Tomino’s Hell on earth

the air raid sirens 

i ran for cover 

& i told You 

I’ll see you after work

Your smile a mimicry of the glistening diamond 

hanging on a chain around your neck.

shadows pooled in the hollow

of Your cheeks

blood flooding into bottomless pupils 

& You drink the poisoned rain like water  

blinded by the screams of Your parched throat 

begging for nourishment.

You watched me & Your tongue 

caressed the inner edge of the blade

a fallen angel blinded by blood like droplets of rain –

one arm outstretched and the other

hollow like Your eyes 

You came to search for me 

Your mind clinging to this hope as

Your barely living body wandered 

through the burning buildings and the corpses littered across the streets

ーa mass grave 

You stopped across from me

and Your hollowed out eyes met my gaze while

i cried tears of blood, 

sorrow paralysing me behind the corrugated iron door

and then the world behind You lit up as if the sun was rising 

with a backdrop of warm orange

when the flames enveloped You, You grew wings of fire

like that of a burning angel, falling into hell

and around Your neck hung a diamond 

rendered to ash by the scorching fire

Destroyer

Photo by Photography Maghradze PH on Pexels.com

You say we’re both too strong to let go

You say it takes courage to hold on

Will. Strength. Courage.

That’s all there is left..

Because hope is too abstract for you to grasp

To comprehend

To capture

As the wind that pushes you on

And on.

As the wind that can only make you strong

Ever stronger

Until the only thing you can do

is destroy.

Tempus, Temporis

Photo by Anne McCarthy on Pexels.com

Line after line,

The hands trace the protected,

glass smooth,

glass distant,

face

with a ghostlike murmuring of

a

touch.

You cannot see the ginger ripples that it etches

into

the

surface…

You cannot see the tentative movements laid

bare in each omnipresent tick…

But you can feel how the light changes,

The steady, familiar outreach of

Light…dark

Light…dark

Matching the rhythms beating beneath those hands.

Its constancy, a clever guise

for something that can bound so easily beyond the reach

of your

outstretched

hands.

For something that brushes by-

Even in the sunken depths

of

your

dreams

To fly

Photo by Rakicevic Nenad on Pexels.com

“Pain is not a way of life. Pain is a journey, and like all journeys, it will eventually come to an end.”

Cahira. I had tried to help her, to reach to her but she never saw my hand reaching out of the shadows. That was the only thing worse than not being heard, was being unable to speak to someone who needed to be heard.

I was with her when she silently cried herself to sleep, when she reached her breaking point. I was with her when she flew for the first time, when she developed her love of quotes, when she went to her first library where she spent a great deal of time breathing in the different books. I will be with her when she raises a family, when she loses all those things she loves most, when she grows old, when her heart no longer beats the rhythm of life, but the silence of end. I was and always will be with her.

It was a day that Cahira would have embraced, her favourite sort of day. Warm with a gentle zephyr and a brilliant blue sky, beautiful as the one she had painted on her ceiling. But instead, she just lay there staring at her ceiling, watching her dreams disappear behind the clouds that would never move and when you try to reach behind them you would have to scrub them off along with the abandoned dream.

After what felt like a long time she got up, walked to her second-storey window and watched the sky. I could see the longing in her eyes, the longing I felt for those days we used to spend together laughing in the gentle kisses of the sunshine. She turned around, as if ignoring the call of freedom.

She walked across her room, past the wall of quotes that we had dedicated an entire afternoon to decorating, to the shelf on the opposite side of her room that held everything Cahira cherished, that were her life. Her scrapbook of memories, a gold locket adorned by tiny multi-coloured butterflies that had been the last gift her father had given to her before he went off with his girlfriend to who knows where, and a photograph of us on the day we first met. She stared at these items for a while, as if she were only truly seeing them at this moment.

Then she grabbed hold of the first item within reach-the locket-with a savagery I did not know she possessed and hurled it across the room, where it hit her window and tiny shards of what were once beautiful butterflies, littered the floor beneath. She paused for just a moment, and then she screamed. Her scream was not only of fear, but of pain, of anger, of longing. Tears started flowing down her cheeks as her screams intensified. That’s when I wished that she had never grown up, because when she did she understood everything that people had done to her in her past.

She then picked up her scrapbook and started ripping it. Shreds of wet paper fell like the way a destroyed life would fall to its end. Then she picked up the photograph.

She got up and pocketed the photo and then she ran, to the park where we met and up the tree closest to the sky. When she got to the top, she pulled the photo out of her pocket and she stared up at the sky. In her eyes, I saw that young girl I had met ten years ago, the girl who still wanted to fly. Then her lips formed one word which she whispered as if it were her final breath, “Adyelya.”

Then she launched herself out of the tree and though her body plummeted, her spirit flew.

We were lying on her bed in silence. Not in the silence of awkwardness, but in the silence of thought. We were both staring up at the ceiling which was painted in hues of blue and white clouds. I remember painting the sky on the ceiling with her when she was seven.

 Then a question I have never thought to ask occurs to me, “Why the sky?” I ask her.

She immediately knows what I ask of. Her silence stretches on a bit longer, then she answers.

 “The sky is infinite, full of infinite possibilities and mysteries. People only gave it a name so that they could seem like they were in control of it, like they know it and understand it, the way people name things they own. But it is much more than facts. I don’t know what it is, no one really does and that’s why it’s so beautiful. You cannot trap the sky, you cannot hold on to it, you cannot own it, but you can share it, so I will, I will share my painted sky and we can fathom it together.”

“Pain is not a way of life. Pain is a journey, and like all journeys, it will eventually come to an end.”

Cahira. I had tried to help her, to reach to her but she never saw my hand reaching out of the shadows. That was the only thing worse than not being heard, was being unable to speak to someone who needed to be heard.

I was with her when she silently cried herself to sleep, when she reached her breaking point. I was with her when she flew for the first time, when she developed her love of quotes, when she went to her first library where she spent a great deal of time breathing in the different books. I will be with her when she raises a family, when she loses all those things she loves most, when she grows old, when her heart no longer beats the rhythm of life, but the silence of end. I was and always will be with her.

It was a day that Cahira would have embraced, her favourite sort of day. Warm with a gentle zephyr and a brilliant blue sky, beautiful as the one she had painted on her ceiling. But instead, she just lay there staring at her ceiling, watching her dreams disappear behind the clouds that would never move and when you try to reach behind them you would have to scrub them off along with the abandoned dream.

After what felt like a long time she got up, walked to her second-storey window and watched the sky. I could see the longing in her eyes, the longing I felt for those days we used to spend together laughing in the gentle kisses of the sunshine. She turned around, as if ignoring the call of freedom.

She walked across her room, past the wall of quotes that we had dedicated an entire afternoon to decorating, to the shelf on the opposite side of her room that held everything Cahira cherished, that were her life. Her scrapbook of memories, a gold locket adorned by tiny multi-coloured butterflies that had been the last gift her father had given to her before he went off with his girlfriend to who knows where, and a photograph of us on the day we first met. She stared at these items for a while, as if she were only truly seeing them at this moment.

Then she grabbed hold of the first item within reach-the locket-with a savagery I did not know she possessed and hurled it across the room, where it hit her window and tiny shards of what were once beautiful butterflies, littered the floor beneath. She paused for just a moment, and then she screamed. Her scream was not only of fear, but of pain, of anger, of longing. Tears started flowing down her cheeks as her screams intensified. That’s when I wished that she had never grown up, because when she did she understood everything that people had done to her in her past.

She then picked up her scrapbook and started ripping it. Shreds of wet paper fell like the way a destroyed life would fall to its end. Then she picked up the photograph.

She got up and pocketed the photo and then she ran, to the park where we met and up the tree closest to the sky. When she got to the top, she pulled the photo out of her pocket and she stared up at the sky. In her eyes, I saw that young girl I had met ten years ago, the girl who still wanted to fly. Then her lips formed one word which she whispered as if it were her final breath, “Adyelya.”

Then she launched herself out of the tree and though her body plummeted, her spirit flew.

We were lying on her bed in silence. Not in the silence of awkwardness, but in the silence of thought. We were both staring up at the ceiling which was painted in hues of blue and white clouds. I remember painting the sky on the ceiling with her when she was seven.

 Then a question I have never thought to ask occurs to me, “Why the sky?” I ask her.

She immediately knows what I ask of. Her silence stretches on a bit longer, then she answers.

 “The sky is infinite, full of infinite possibilities and mysteries. People only gave it a name so that they could seem like they were in control of it, like they know it and understand it, the way people name things they own. But it is much more than facts. I don’t know what it is, no one really does and that’s why it’s so beautiful. You cannot trap the sky, you cannot hold on to it, you cannot own it, but you can share it, so I will, I will share my painted sky and we can fathom it together.”

Overhual

A crack,

A tiny,

Tiny

Crack.

Insignificant

To anyone

But

You.

You aren’t supposed to break,

The wat

Diamonds

Aren’t meant

To break.

The way we are told

Warriors

Aren’t meant

To break.

You pull yourself apart

You tear through every fibre

To find

To search

To fix

That crack

Of imperfection.

So you’ll again

Be

Perfection.

But you find a crack everywhere

You

Look

Everywhere

You

Cower

Everywhere

You

Hide.

Cracks

You

Hide

From.

Because

Diamonds aren’t meant to break

Are they?

Brief Hiatus

Hi readers!👋

I’ll be going on a semi-hiatus (I won’t be posting on weekdays but I will be posting on the weekend) until the end of term (around 2-3 weeks.) I may also change up my publishing schedule when I come back.

🥦H.C.A Agate