Bereft
Prick my finger on thistle
That speaks sweetly, of royalty
Find the moth-eaten holes in its words
Through the smell of my copper-scented blood
Trap me in amber and hide me away
Keep me in your pocket next to a pungent rosary
Protect me from the rampant darkness
Close it with a button from your dead grandmother's coat
Adorn me in lace from a poisoned bride's gown
String silken cocoons around my frail neck
Call them precious porcelain, saltwater pearls
Am I beautiful yet?
Slice stripes down my thighs
Carve delicate floral patterns into my skin
Imitate the lace tights
Worn by all the pretty girls under their too-short skirts
Give me to the forest you call home
Where the willows whisper words of withered wise men
Don't let me hear their mutterings
Shield my precious ears from the fork-tongued truth
Choke me slowly with incense and pesticides
Kill me like vermin and bury the regret
Mourn not for the pretty thing missing on your shelf,
But the beauty it never believed in