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The Night When My Father Was No More
From up above I heard the door,
Slamming shut.
And through the room came my father,
A blur.
On that, the day of two fathers' birth,
When one was no more.
Up the stairs I climbed in fear,
Anticipating a calm before the storm.
There it was, open and beckoning,
Sitting in the center of the room.
The toy chest I had come to know,
Was unhinged and splintered.
I turned it right side up,
To face a mirror – staring.
The image of a fair skinned man,
With rough chinly subble,
and the hint of his eyes,
carrying bags.
I returned to my father,
and showed him my mirror.
And he bowed his head,
and knelt before me,
Squeezing his hands over mine,
While a single tear
dripped onto my mirror.
And that night,
My father didn't tuck me in – under my covers.
He left me for yonder,
While me dreams were squandered,
on that night: the night of broken mirrors.
I became a man,
With the turn of a back,
and the slamming of a door...
On that, the night of two fathers' birth,
When both had become no more.
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