A dragonfly asked me to play
one day when I was
eight. I thought to win
the chase, would be akin
to burning at the stake.
I was unnatural
in that nature
and could never stay.
To be free was not my goal,
My wants held
in a chalice, I could never drink,
only offer.
Eyes flickered back
to the shore that held
that otherworld
as I quelled the internal rot
feeding flies.
The game – abandoned
I,
forced to endure
the chatter of a bus
headed toward reality.
…
The childhood spell I had known
became wrapped in iridescent wings
I could almost see
but never be.
I was instead a witch
who worshipped willows
and turned beauty bitter.
My coven burned before it formed
and a wooden broom –
my wings.
…
I saw a dragonfly at the park
It danced above a shallow pond
glistening like a prism.
Time became the ripples
at the water’s edge
and I then stood,
like years before,
with the present
woven through a game
two dragonflies wished to play.