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HAUNTED HOUSE

By Hannah Rae



I put the flame of the lighter to my wrist,

skin puckering like a loved mouth,

the morning sun doesn’t even do me so good.

 

It is seven a.m. – I recall

the childhood ghost who lived in my closet

back in that run-down victorian on the ocean -

pink shutters, biting dog.

She would emerge in the night

to walk the stairs,

 

I have become her,

carrying these goodbyes

like great roses, this purposeless wandering -

grown tired too, the blood

on the bathroom wallpaper.

Each night I clean

but the stains never really come off, do they darling?


I never meant to hurt myself, was only looking

for something that felt good.

I carry this behaviour even now,

in offerings far greater than blood

and the sun comes down on me so hard,

and never enough.

 

Starving to death at the foot of your bed -

you loved me so much back then.

I pray to the image of myself in the wallpaper,

just one more time

love me again.


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