Creative Writing, Poetry

Poetry: Oliver and No Company

The people dodge soda stains on the sidewalk,
their attention directed to the ground so they don’t see
the sign that says ‘free kittens’ in shaky black marker,
a plea for them to take us out of the worn box
and show us what a real home looks like,
where we wouldn’t have to worry about food
as we spent our days playing with yarn
instead of green glass bottles and sacred hair balls
we fight over, our only source of fun.

My brothers and sisters plead for the people’s attention
by pouncing on the rim of the box, pushing and shoving,
doing whatever it takes to get chosen for protection
but we are easy to ignore on a street full of distractions.
Smoke from a man’s mouth drifts our way,
smelling worse than our only neighbor, the sewer,
while the clanking of metal trashcans
is mistaken for music by the people
who stop for that, but not for us.

Cries surround me, drowned out to the people by sirens
from trucks that zoom past as we stand still
begging, pleading, asking sweetly for love
from those who never intended to give it
and for a moment I think that I should join my family
in their task of getting out of misery but I can’t,
my quiet tongue holds me back again.

I always was the silent one.

One person approaches, called over by the noise,
he pets us with his dirty, cloth hands
and wishes us luck with our quest,
which is enough to tell the people that pass us
that we are friendly enough for hellos
and too cute for goodbyes
as strangers took my siblings away, one by one,
until they have all been taken away from me.

I always was the ugly one.

A little boy picks me up, pulling on my tail
but that doesn’t matter to me as he asks his mother
if they can take me home and feed me, play with me,
and name me Oliver like their last cat.
I flick my ears forward and tell my eyes to grow,
anything to be cute enough to be taken home,
but his mother tells him to put me back.

I always was the rejected one.

Rain begins to fall, gluing my fur together in clumps,
while the people hide under umbrellas and in buildings
I have no hope of getting to; ever-exposed in the box.
I open my mouth to greet the water with my dryness
and snaps of my baby teeth, just sharp enough to scare
the people away from me as I pray silently for them
to come back, like they did for my siblings
in the sunshine of the day while I was left behind
to fend for myself in the cruel of the night.

An unheard cry escapes my lips as the box
becomes a pool I’m afraid of. I bat my paws frantically
trying to keep the water under me, off of me,
as I squeak and cry out for someone, anyone,
to save me from the box, from the streets of death,
but I am left to paddle for my own safety
until the box dampens and breaks,
the pool of water chucking me into the city
full of people with big feet for trampling
and small hearts full of hatred for forgotten
kittens like me, the lonely one.

 

Creative Writing, Poetry

Poetry: I am here

I warn you now that when you are lost,

I will find you. When there are too many

thick trees to see the sun

and too many turns to find the right one,

I will help you. When you cannot carry

the weight of the world,

I will take a plate and walk beside you.

When you bleed, I will mend you.

When you scream, I will calm you.

When you cry, I will hold you.

Most importantly though,

when you break down,

I will still love you.

Creative Writing, Poetry

Poetry: Best of Luck

You were always looking to replace me

and I wish that you knew what that felt

like, to be constantly not good enough

to compete with yet another pretty face,

a secretary with benefits I didn’t see

coming. I guess there was always meant

to be a punishment for loving so blindly

and for being invested in something

you had already decided to return,

but I move on and move forward

every day because I know you have

it coming for you. You did it to yourself

and I owe myself an apology for letting

it go on for this long, for not seeing

the signs that you were a boy

when I already knew I needed

a gentleman. It is too late to dwell

on all of that now. It is the time

for me to wish upon a shooting star

that all of this will blow up in your face,

that she decides you are no longer

a pretty face and that she leaves

you with no reason like the way

you so easily left me. I would never

wish bad things, but I don’t feel

the need to be nice to you anymore,

and one day she won’t either.

Creative Writing, Poetry

Poetry: Bloody Bullet

I tiptoe but you hear

me coming your way, it’s too late

for games, you say, it’s too late

to play. So I retreat

to my seat in the corner

where I am to be shamed

by your red words once more.

A bloody bullet you used before,

a bloody bullet off the un-swept floor

pointed directly at me,

so sullied, so dirty. I can’t help

it anymore than I can help myself

at this point. Stranded. Screaming,

pleading, bleeding, begging for you

not to pull that trigger again.

This is the end, you say,

it’s too late for games,

it’s too late to play.

It is time to pull the trigger,

to attack me with all you’ve got,

an old wound ripped open

that keeps me in my seat,

where I retreat when I try

to move us forward together

and you leave me to bleed out alone.

Creative Writing, Poetry

Poetry: What is love?

You stare and ask, “What is love?”

and I’m not quite sure how to reply.

I want to tell you it’s the chill

skipping down your spine

when the wind catches you hair

just so, or the way you let me

lay my tomato down on your plate,

unwanted décor from discarded

food. It’s more than that though.

It’s the way your teeth don’t quite

line up, the taste of morning coffee

on your breath, the calluses

on the palms of your hands, the way

my eyes look for you in places

even when I know you are not there,

the joke I choose to keep to myself

until I can whisper it in your ear,

the chest I rest my head on,  the ribs

I poke in an attempt to tickle

that always results in a claim of pain

I know you won’t hold against me.

Love is the way you try the food

I offer even when you don’t

want to comply, your smile

even when I get on your nerves,

the laugh that starts at your stomach

and works its way up your chest

to your throat and your lips,

all the way to your smile that meets

your eyes that are always there

to interlock with mine. It is having

someone to care about whether

they are here or far away,

a person to feel for, a person

to worry about, a person to kiss

all the pain away. Love is a hug

from arms that feel safe, a smile

from a best friend, a hand to hold

from a crush, a kiss from a lover,

and a person to hold in your heart

forever. I want to tell you all of that,

but I go in for a kiss and pull back,

slowly, to give you the best answer

I could possibly give: “Love is you.”