The teenager sits on the balcony
And whistles
Praying for its family to come and find it.
When they do come, the family sees not what they want,
But an ugly, broken thing
Whistling their child's song.
Transition period between winter and spring
Where the teenagers, unrecognisable
Are desperate for a warm place to sit and cry in company.
The balcony persists, through the seasons
Despite houses shredding to debris
And landscapes being morphed into giant city skylines.
Not a small moment left under the concrete.
There's a dull moment when the sun is hidden by the tw0-way tinted glass
And the teenger, untouched, glowing somehow;
Yet hurting from the inside
Considers going to the corner store and breaking their rule
About smoking and skateboarding.
Without a helmet,
They jump
Because the balcony always ushered unused underwinds into the gaps between skyscrapers
To remind them of their height.
And as they spread their fingers and grasp the fragile thrill of freedom,
Their parents watch from another office window
Illuminated slightly by the neon of a nail salon advertisement;
Between the railing the teenager slides
Parallel and direct as arrows to their targets
Observed by the ones who pushed them apart
Out, away and down.
The teenager makes it over to a lower balcony
And shares a cigarette with a stranger
Who feels the same way about the great grey ocean
Of white light halos
And impatient traffic.
They lean close,
Knowing the other is their mirror image
But without the feeling of glass between,
Only the delicacy of shared breath
And now a friend who knows the joy of falling.
~
About the Creator
Ruby Red
Heya friend, I'm Red!
I write poetry, so subscribe for a hint of vulnerability, some honesty and the occasional glimpse behind my mask π±
Taking a break from Vocal; focusing on my anthology π«Άπ
AI is not art.

Comments (1)
β€οΈ