Freedom

A crack zigzags across the old sidewalk

And wrenches apart the hot concrete,
Exposing a tiny sliver of earth
That for years untold
Has known only crushing pain and darkness.

While above . . . days pass, weeks pass,
And Summer relinquishes its sovereignty to Autumn.
Leaves fall, scarlet and saffron and umber tears
Scurry and dance across the sad gray surface.
Revivified wings flap overhead, rain patters down.

A frigid gale rides in on the back of the North Wind.
Ice crystals settle in the divide, cold elbows
Pushing against the argentine walls
That are desperately struggling to hold together.
The frozen earth shivers beneath this fresh onslaught.

While above . . . days pass, weeks pass,
And Winter reluctantly surrenders its silver crown to Spring.
Lightning splits the sky, thunder rolls and rumbles.
A deluge pounds the sidewalk; a cool river races through the cleft,
Torturously prying it open to the warming world.

The raw earth nestled in the crack feels a pleasant stirring.
A tiny fledgling breaks its surface and stretches toward the sun.
Oaken soldiers flanking the sidewalk tip their glossy green heads
To watch the miracle of birth arising from the ashes of neglect.
The dandelion nods its golden head . . . free at last.

©️2023 jai

Image by Michelle Raponi from Pixabay

Broken

broken inside
broken in two
broken promise
that didn’t come true

broken happiness
broken joy
broken life
all destroyed

broken dreams
broken hope
broken will
no way to cope

broken spirit
broken mind
broken in pieces
and left behind

©copyright 2023 jai


unbounded quatrain

Image via Pixabay

Johnnys

The morning is heavy, pregnant with spring.
Dew sparkles on the new blades stretched in mass,
Testing their new-found strength; in shouts of green,
They greet the rose-soft sunrise, raise their glass,
Salute their warm savior with verve and sass.
“Hello!” shout the iris, waving blue heads.
“Hello!” shout the tulips, white, pink, and red.

Near the barn, johnny-jump-ups perk their ears,
Wonder why the fuss from their vain cousins.
After all, from early March they’ve been here,
Yellow and purple, dozens and dozens.
Popping up while the ground is yet frozen,
Johnnys are trailblazers, fearless and bold.
What’s the big deal about a little cold?

©2023 jai


rhyme royal

Image via Gerri Duke

Striptease

some spirits are as fragile as a rose

sweet as honey, lovely to gaze upon

but easily damaged

by callous souls who heartlessly ravage

scribbling hateful words with sharpened crayons—

soft petals wilt ‘neath weight of heavy prose

leaving door open to rot and disease

rose abandons hope, does a sad striptease


©️2023 jai

wounded couplet

Image by Jiří Rotrekl from Pixabay

Penance

the wolf is at the door

he howls…I moan
he knows I am in here
afraid and all alone

the wolf is at the door
he claws the ancient wood
he knows I am behind it
he knows I will taste good

the wolf is at the door
his nose draws in my smell
tastes the sweetness of my fear
his appetite I will quell

the wolf is at the door
I rise to let him in
this night will witness penance
past time to pay for sins

the wolf is at the door
I gather my courage close
my fingers curl round the icy knob
I let in the lupine ghost

the wolf is in the door
he growls...I scream
thrust my dagger into his heart
carve out his bloody wet dream

the wolf is on the floor
I smile in satisfaction
he thought I would be an easy meal
too weak to take bold action

the wolf dies on the floor
no longer a threat to me
I write my name in his cooling blood
for other wolves to see
©2023 jai

Image by Peace,love,happiness from Pixabay

Love Hurts

John Parker stepped into his pants, glanced back at the woman sleeping in the bed he had just vacated. And the guilt hit him. Why did he do it? Why did he have to nail some bimbo he’d just met when he had a beautiful, willing wife at home?

He almost always questioned his actions after the fact. But never before. When he met a pretty young thing, every thought in his head was crowded out by the one imperative: get her in the sack. And since he fit all the prerequisites—tall, dark, handsome, successful—most A-list women had tucked away in their minds when eyeing a potential hookup, he seldom struck out. It was just so damn easy.

He left three hundred bucks—cab fare plus a little something extra—on the bedside table, and after looking around to see if he’d left anything behind, slipped quietly out the door. He hated goodbyes, some more than others. That’s how he’d ended up married to Liv: he couldn’t tell her goodbye.

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Rivers

In her life, she has crossed many rivers.
Some she swam with sure, steady strokes;
Some she walked over on burning bridges;
Some were so shallow, she easily waded.
But fording the last one, she almost drowned,
Failed to reach the other side.

The swift, black waters dragged her down,
Filled her lungs with life’s heartaches,
Then cast her battered body back to shore;
Left her choking, gasping, gagging,
Down, but not defeated.
Never defeated.

Older and wiser, she bided her time,
Waited at the river for the dire wolves to come drink,
And built a raft from their strong bones,
Made a cape from their warm, gray fur,
Then floated across the cold choppy surface
And stepped off safe and warm on the other side.

She fashioned a home from the raft bones,
Made a bed from the sleek fur cape,
And she abided there in the high desert
Content and happy as she grew old
Until the time came for her to leave.
For there was one more river yet to cross.

©2023 jai

Image by freddy urbina from Pixabay