Unnamed

Unnamed
By Delphie
my family rose with the sun
though we hadn’t
in months.
sixteen.
we’ve survived behind drawn curtains
like roaches in corners, living
in the dusty splinters of the light
we let in.
like scavengers ravaging
crumbs
of stiffened crust and crusted paste
clustered in cardboard pizza
boxed-up waste
we could eat, once
though we hadn’t
in months.
sixteen.
we’ve survived behind drawn curtains
like roaches in corners, living
in the dusty splinters of the light
we let in.
like scavengers ravaging
crumbs
of stiffened crust and crusted paste
clustered in cardboard pizza
boxed-up waste
we could eat, once
i found art in the mildew
crawling
up the walls
i’d trace its
vines,
like ivy,
my fingertip, a paintbrush, stained green.
acquainted months ago with
the sticky stench of warmed-up-damp,
now a friend. a companion
that cosied the air
from the sting of the outside fresh -
the rattles of its wind
howling move on
the stuffed bear sat on the window seat staring
so longingly, at me, one button eye and
a stitched up mouth
bleeding
synthetic fibres, pleading, whispering
fix me, fix me please
and i would say
you are worn from cuddles
aged from sleepless nights and the sleepiest dreams, bruised
from squeezes
drooled on - nuzzled and snuggled and - named.
but a lie
on my lips
those things would be
but i wish.
my family rose now, often with the moon
often not at all
not in
sixteen months
since Teddy’s death.
that’s one year, and four months, really, but
mum preferred to count time as if
Ted was a baby, still.
born
as my baby brother. born
breathless, befriending
death as i do mould on the walls
growing in a house too stagnant to call home.
still, the clock on the wall ticks on and on and on
as if that time wasn’t cut
too short
too young
too innocent




A powerful piece Delphie
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