Keeping Them Down— or One Day the Sky Might Fall
They dream
on concrete and cobblestones.
In cold, wet gutters.
With eyes and faces turned skyward.
The reprieve of sleep never coming.
And there’s you,
above them.
Walking on air.
Playing
in stars.
And you smile and you wave,
but never does your hand extend.
Never do you lift them.
They are down there dreaming
with their eyes wide open, yearning.
And you are up high, living with eyes closed.
So you cover them, blindfolded.
If you do not look, then you do not see.
And sometimes, you hear their pleas calling up to you.
But you could never reach your hands that far.
Just tell them keep their heads down.
Their time will come.
And they forget.
They leave you to your pedestal
amidst the burning constellations they yearn for.
But tread lightly—
Don’t let them know that that ceiling is glass.
Your castle, fragile and volatile.
Don’t let them know.
Because if they heard your footsteps
in the stars they shoot for over-head,
they might wake from their dreams.
And if the beast woke,
that ceiling
might break.
Splintered shards of bloodied light, tumbling.
Til it falls in their gutters,
with you in their midst.
Til we’re all on one level
and you crawl
with the insects and rats.