The poem exploded in a shopping centre. No one was hurt, except for an adolescent boy who looked into the white blast and went blind.
—–
He kissed her mouth, her neck, her breasts. She dug her nails into his back. A poem slid over them, pooled in their eyes.
—–
During their game, they broke the mirror hanging darkly in their parents’ bedroom. A poem hissed through the cracks, into their mouths.
—–
She wrote the last sentence of her novel, unaware that a poem was hidden in its tangled heart. The poem throbbed, awaiting the reader.
—–
The banners were red and black. The Bird King’s victory speech shattered all the poems. We collected shards and hid them in our dreams.
—–
You woke to see a poem hanging from the ceiling like a light fitting like a stalactite like a vampire like a noose like a carcass.
—–
We tried everything: disinfectant, weed killer, rat poison, bullets, napalm, nukes. But the poems, breeding like cockroaches, wouldn’t die.
