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Torn Shirts and Thousand-Mile Shoes
My words open on petals of tongue-tied
 questions. Shaffolding lights peal across rhythms of broken
 bones, and my hand finds its way into their railings, gripping
 tightly like a child's fear twisting my clenching fingers.
 Asking and questions never walk
 together side by side. I watch by the riverside, blowing across
 candles that make their way through empty weeds of answers, and
 cold-hearted replies.
 
 My brother tugs at my shirt, and tells me he would like to live
 in a cardboard box, made of torn shirts and thousand-mile shoes.
 Such is the way his mind works, struggling to break free of the prison
 I planted there when he was old enough to ask questions. So I tear off mine,
 hand it to his gleaming face and let him work on a dream that will never happen.
 
 I used to walk by the neighborhoods, scuffing my shoes along
 yellowed pavement, leaving black streaks that warned children
 not to come any closer. But they did, so I planted a prison in them,
 letting them dream of ripped fabric, worn-out pathways. Their peals of laughter
 rang through an avenue of black spider-faces and greying strands that
 clamped onto heads of unsuspecting strangers.
 
 I would like to grow old, I think. Sleep on days of panic and
 work when the world sleeps in peaceful ignorance. My brother would take
 his cardboard house, place it in my front yard. Watch
 as I weed the garden of empty lies and precipitate minds, until all that is left is the
 strange wonder of new skin, new eyes. Watch as I carefully plant more seeds,
 spreading a path that would carve out new flowers and dying petals.
 
 Laugh, as I build a new set of gates around me
 that would spring, fully formed,
 into prison bars.

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