My grandmother never cut flowers with scissors, raised her nonexistent eyebrows plucked beyond all veins of recognition, blinked one eye fishlike & said a knife was all she needed. She’d come inside with sticky hands, green juice like blood, double-take, monster in the basement, peonies pale pink & festering with ants. The knife gleaming like dragonfly wings like all the jeweled eyes of birds. Somewhere someone you know is dying. Never cut flowers with scissors, let them fall at the blade like my great-grandpa’s leg in the war. Spring is always coming.
My grandfather’s blood ran with sugar, too much then too little beep beep beep beep, woke me up forever until I grew up & stopped wearing dresses. Ask him if he’s ever eaten upstairs, sandwich on rye or slice of lukewarm tiramisu from the bakery on the corner, go on ask him & I’ll bet you twenty years of someone’s life he’ll say no. Twenty years he spent like pennies pinched tight between his knucklebones, peeling the skin off the apples off the pears off the sunrises & the pale flesh between your throat & the ground. Never cut flowers with scissors. In another country people die. Spring will never arrive.
Comments
There's something about this piece that feels like a slap, and your words are cutting. You gave what felt like the ideal amount of detail to fully paint a picture of these two characters, leaving enough room for the reader to make their own interpretations as they may. The run-on style you employ works particularly well here, too.
Thank you so much! I really enjoyed writing this piece even though it sort of felt like a confession I wasn't supposed to make. And thanks for noticing the prose style! :D
This is so beautiful!! The descriptions are breathtaking, and I had to read it over twice because of how much I loved it! Also I can't believe you're only 11--this seems like something that could be in an anthology written by adults!! :)
I second this — breathtaking work!
Thank you both so much omg!! :D
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