The Boy From My Childhood
I still remember the way
he used to smile at me
from across the room
as if his boyhood hid his sins
and in truth, it rather did.
I still remember the time
we sat on the swings
as he mourned his dead dad,
reminding me that my dad
had been there that night for him,
but until that sunny afternoon
I had never known that was something my father did.
I still remember the day
I remembered what he had done;
how he layed his little boy body
upon the frame of my little girl self;
years passed with me
never knowing what it meant
until all at once I did.
I still remember the night
he came over
and we made a fort of
blankets and the swingset and other playthings;
my dad brought us store bought cookies
and we three slept under the stars
in my backyard, as regular campers did.
I still remember the afternoon
we played those games of tag,
yelling and crying and laughing
as children did.
I still remember the moment
I realized we were no longer little ones;
it was the moment I heard the news
that he had killed them,
and I shook as I thought back
to that cool summer night
when we were just children,
before we turned to darkness,
playing and dreaming as the innocent do.
I still remember.