No Point in Leaving
she droops like a melting candle,
eyes glazed,
joint smoked.
(in so much that the scent of the leaves is nothing like Fall,
her mother tells her,
taking a drag of her own blunt,
her pale hand tembling)
AND THEN (and then)
the girl closes her
eyes
to look out the window
and wonders
exactly how safe
does the alarm system and eight locks really
keep them?
(the keys hang loose from
the bedazzled keychain
she bought her
mother two years ago,
a Mother's Day gift)
it seems like there's no point
in pretending to be
safe
if
(as her mother says)
human determination knows no bounds
and
the world pulls you into trouble whether you
like it or
not
(She keeps her hair cropped,
mother says there's less to grab
that way)