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the mirror
A man stood outside a store
 With his feet scraping against splintered floors
 Gazing at a door that had long been unhinged
 And was just laying there
 Dead and lifeless against a sun bleached frame
 He took a breath 
 And entered the store
 His eyes meeting the floor
 Covered in scrapes 
 From the many haphazard boots
 Dragging themselves and their wares in
 His rough hands brushed the walls
 To steady the sea of emotions 
 Trying to break free of his chest
 He squinted his eyes
 And walked to the back
 Stopping in front of two large mirrors
 One strong and gold
 With large carvings
 Detailing a petite thin sheet of clear glass
 With soft edges
 And tarnished gold flakes
 Whose carvings smiled at the man
 And whose slanted glass invited him in
 He broke his gaze just in time 
 To notice the other mirror next to it
 Simple
 Small
 Black
 Smooth
 It was cheap and would have matched the man’s home
 Would have complimented his humble but cozy home
 But the golden frame called to him
 And when he brushed his rough fingers on the frame
 It was the way a lover touches their beloved
 And he knew he could not part with his mirror
 He had already decided it
 His
 He looked into the mirror’s glass
 The way it reflected him back
 He looked happier
 Thinner
 Younger
 Everything he promised himself he would one day be
 He bought the mirror without a second glance at the black frame
 It was far more costly then he could afford
 So he gave the man at the counter a check
 And hurried off before the boy could realize 
 He didn’t look like a man
 Who could afford such a grand mirror
 He ran out the door surpassing the frame and the floor
 Barely grazing the walls
 And ignoring the splinters
 He just walked ahead
 Staring at himself in the mirror
 His smile seemed whiter
 His nose no longer crooked
 His cheeks more defined
 He was so busy looking at himself he walked into the street
 Narrowly missing the traffic
 But he did not hear their honks
 He only heard the mirror
 Speaking sweet words into his old ears
 And promising him things
 He never dreamed he could have ever again
 He came home and immediately nailed the mirror to his wall
 Right y his door
 Where he would see it every day
 He nailed that mirror to tightly
 So that if the day came where they wanted the mirror back
 They would have to 
 Rip apart his wall to get it
 He laughed and smiled at the mirror
 He pushed his hands against it
 Feeling every smooth inch
 Until suddenly he found a nick
 A nick so small it could only be seen
 By a very careful eye
 A nick not even the size of a pea
 But the nick seemed to grow in front of the man
 Seemed to swallow the golden frame
 The frame cried out to the man 
 But the nick had already swallowed its beauty
 The carvings were replaced with the hole
 The smooth replaced with the crack
 The mans eyes widened
 And he no longer saw himself
 He saw the cackling grey haired
 Liver spotted
 Shell he had become
 His teeth became yellow 
 His arms frail
 His neck thin
 His knees knobby
 His spine bent
 And his eyes glazed
 The man tried to inch away in fear
 But the man in the mirror smiled back at him
 And held its arms open wide
 Grinning 
 Its skin rotting off
 Exposing dry bones
 And with a desperate screech 
 The man broke the mirror

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