The Girl Whose Ballet Shoes Were Taken
He watched her in her deepest sleep.
She was no longer
His favourite ballerina
She was now, instead,
A side effect
Of this war.
He watched her in his mind
Her rosy lips untainted
By the taste of death.
He painted,
Inside his head,
A life without her.
It was,
A future that lacked colour
A past that would hurt
To live with.
At three, she had wanted to be a firefighter.
At five, a pilot
Riding above the sun by day
Ambitious girl, wasn’t she?
At seven she became a corpse,
That died in vain.
The tanks in the streets came rolling
She turned into the ricochet
Of a gunshot
Into the ricochet of a thousand gunshots
All of them searing holes
Into his life.
He watched her choke-
He watched her choke
To death.
Eventually,
She let go
And buckled
Under the weight of a hundred cannon balls
Under an army of soldier’s boots
Their shoes going crunch crunch
Over a city of broken bones.
He watched her being tossed,
Atop a tangled mesh
Of white and red remains
The stench of human flesh,
Unrestrained, rose and
Slowly kissed her
Her blood-stained ballet shoes
Were snatched
From her feet
By soldiers
And given to someone else’s sister.