A poem about how a run in with a junky makes a drug dealer change his life. |
She asked me once, "Do you got the goods?" I couldn't see their faces hidden by their hoods. The light caught her visage; she is just a babe lost in the woods. She's scratching like a dog with fleas. She went from a little girl to a rat without its' cheese. The tracks are locked and I alone held all the keys. Have you ever seen Winter in the Mid West? Her eyes were cold and dead like that; they were making me obsessed. Two ships set adrift that are constantly distressed. I admit I was lost at sea. Absent in her gaze like a needle in debris. The sort of incident that brings you to your knees. I warned, "If I sell you this, you could die." "I'm already dead," she whispered with a sigh. She spoke in a tone that would make angels cry. Her cohorts urged her just to leave. She wouldn't go with them; she had something to achieve. The needle's rather like her bible; it gives her something to believe. Like United Way I wasn't giving in. I tried to save her from herself that night or at least her favorite sin. Across the road she found another merchant much to my chagrin. The next day I was reading of those who died. I saw those eyes again; they ravaged me from inside. I gazed upon her portrait and let my feet wade in the tide. I haven't sold the poison since that day. Playing chess with human lives just stopped being fun to play. I've never bore a cross, but when I see ocean I still stop to kneel and pray. |