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Soaring
Dance Like Nobody's Watching
  
  I close my eyes,
  And her face is with me.
  Laugh lines
  Etched deep into her rosy cheeks.
  Gold mine eyes
  Glittering with the sparkles
  Of a thousand different crystals.
  I clutch my locket,
  Feel the cold metal surrounded by my fingers,
  And allow my pencil
  To lead its way across the paper.
  Dancing its own path
  Until the sun goes down.
Muscle Memory
  Moonlight streams
  Through the weathered boards of Fort Samanna,
  Giving me the light I don’t need
  To draw the face I know so well.
  It spills onto the figure
  In the yard below,
  Her feet moving in a perfect rhythm
  As the soccer ball soars into the goal.
  Immediately,
  The girl retrieves it and begins again
  Pounding the same path
  Until the grass and dirt
  Are blended together
  In one muddled mess.
  My sister
  The one and only
  Soccer Virtuoso.
A Reality Away From Reality
  Time flies by
  Unbeknownst to me
  The only thing in the world
  Is my pencil.
  My thoughts
  Are finally at bay.
  My own perfect
  Untouchable
  Bubble.
Until it gets popped.
A Million Reasons
  Her hands clamp onto my shoulders
  Right as her feet leave the ground,
  Catapulting herself up and over my hunched figure.
  She lands in a perfect crouch
  Like the sure footed star she is.
  She straightens up
  And her sagging bun slaps the back of her neck,
  A feeble attempt to keep her wild blonde curls
  Out of her million dollar sight.
  Her eyes,
  Sparkling with all the life mine have lost,
  Focus on me with an exaggerated wink.
  I clap my hand over my chest
  And focus on my breathing,
  Pointlessly trying to calm my frantic heart.
  Over 15 years,
  And every little antic still gets me everytime.
  Anna,
  Taking no social cues as per usual,
Leans over to peer at my sketch.
  I shake my head and pull it away,
  But not before she steals a glance.
  “Again, Sam?”
  Her now disapproving eyes
  Make my heart sink.
  “It’s always her.
  There’s a whole world out there to draw,
  So why is it always her?”
  A million answers
  Run through my mind.
  Because I miss her.
  Because drawing her keeps her alive
  Better than the coffin under the ground.
  Because this helps me to remember her
  And everything about her I vowed to never forget.
  Because illuminating her
  The way I will always view her,
Eases my guilt.
Silence
  I don’t answer Anna,
  Only shrug
  And tell her she wouldn’t understand.
  She insists she would,
  But I know she’s wrong.
  How could she
  When she doesn’t feel
  The stabbing, lurching pains
  Reverberating through me every single second
  Of every single day.
  Slowly devouring me
  From the inside out.
  Starting with my heart,
  That’s become too dark to follow.
  Anna sighs deeply,
  Like she always does when I close myself off.
  When I act like the firefighters I used to idolize,
  Distinguishing any sign of emotion.
  She turns to leave,
  But bends down before she does.
  She cups my chin,
  Forcing our eyes to meet.
  The shutters in mine flicker,
  But remain firmly closed.
  “It wasn’t your fault.”
  Anna whispers,
  Slowly and clearly,
  So I can’t miss a word.
  I don’t say anything
  As she turns on her heel and exits.
  But once I hear her footsteps,
  Climbing down the ladder
  And into the house,
  I whisper
  As the tears begin to roll down my cheeks,
  “But it was.”
5:45 AM, Monday Morning
  Anna leaps out of bed
  Before the first ring of the alarm clock has ended.
  She throws open the curtains,
  The light pouring onto me
  Is so bright that my eyes clamp shut
  And a groan of protest escapes my lips.
  By the time I manage to drag myself out of bed,
  Anna has already thrown on her favorite pair of joggers,
  One of her many varsity soccer sweatshirts,
  And her accurately deemed untamable curls
  Are already escaping their ponytail prison.
  As I stumble around the room,
  Grumbling an incoherent mix of nonsense and obscenities,
  Anna sticks her tongue out at me
  And says, “I get the last muffin,”
  Before sprinting downstairs.
  I roll my eyes
  And finally manage to make it outside
  Just as the bus arrives.
  
  Welcome to High School...
  I slide into the ripped leather seats
  Directly behind the bus driver,
  Stupidly believing that it will stop anything,
  And drown myself in the sweet world of music.
  Anna passes me and sits in the last seat,
  Surrounded by the jocks
  That idolize her
  And torture me.
  I’ve learned to ignore
  Both the names and the objects
  Constantly thrown at me,
  More common than snowstorms in New England.
  So it doesn’t surprise me
  That the second we begin to move
  Papers start thumping against the back of my head.
  I don’t dare turn around,
  But I know if I did,
  Anna’s sneers would match those of my tormentors.
  
  … A Predictable Hell
  I get off the bus and keep my head down,
  Focused on the grass, then rocky pavement,
  Then paint-splattered tile.
  A weight immediately lifts off of my chest,
  Without me even knowing it was there,
  And suddenly I can breathe again.
  For a short time,
  I’m free once again.
  I smile
  And slump into the beanbag chair.
  Everyone nods at me as they enter,
  Not because we’re friends,
  But because we have mutual respect
  For fellow artists.
  The teacher,
  Miss Settle,
  Greets us with a smile.
  And we silently begin our separate projects.
  The painters grab their paints,
  The sculptors grab their clay,
  While I grab my trusty charcoal pencil,
  Close my eyes,
  And lose myself in my memories of her once again.
  
  Unrelenting
  Her happiness would always trigger mine.
  Her chocolate chip cookies could cure any broken heart I ever had.
  Her hugs would instantly calm my seemingly endless tears.
  Just her presence
  Filled in any aches in my body.
  But now,
  There’s nothing to stem my pain.
  
  “Goodbye”
  What I wouldn’t do
  To be able to tell her
Just
One
More
Word.
  
  Aimless
  I am a cloud,
  Merely drifting through my day,
  Never connecting to anything
  Or anyone.
  What’s the point of getting attached?
  If people will just leave,
And abandon me once more.
  So I just drift
  Drift
  Drift.
Like The SUn and THe Moon
  The whole walk home from the bus stop
  Is full of Anna’s chatter.
  About
  The captain of the football team
  And the most popular guy in school
  Fighting to be her prom date.
  About
  Her best friend being angry
  That she’s stuck with
  The baseball team leader
  And not someone
  Who plays a more important sport.
  
  About
  Trying to get out of the detention
  She received from skipping first period
  To hook up
  With her arch enemy’s boyfriend behind the stairwell.
  She expects me to listen
  Then offer pity
  For the oh so difficult life she lives.
  But instead
  I shake my head
  And walk quicker.
Wordless
  
  It’s only once I walk away
  That Anna snaps personalities.
  She jogs up to me,
  Puts her hand on my shoulder, squeezes, and says,
  “Enough about me,
  What about you, Sam?”
  I shrug.
  What does she think the answer will be?
  That the tomato stain on my shirt made me laugh?
  That the comments made by my own twin sister
  Make my life worth living?
  Sometimes,
  There are no words.
  The disappointment
  Written in every crevice
  Of her face,
  Triggers my tears.
  I shouldn’t feel even an ounce of guilt
  For being closed off,
  Especially after how she treats me,
  But somehow I still do.
  
  Questions
  Not even the screams of my heart,
  The horrors of my mind,
  Can drown out
  Her broken voice.
“Why won’t you talk to me anymore?”
Like The Moon and The Stars
  When we were little,
  It was
  Anna and Sam,
  Sam and Anna,
  Samanna.
  We were mistaken for the same person,
  The inseparable twins you hear about
  In books and in studies.
  With telepathy
  Love
  Potential.
  The only difference,
  Was our personalities.
  Anna was always athletic,
  Confident.
  I admired that she always followed her heart,
  Did what was best for her,
  Not for anyone else.
  I was shy,
  Obsessed with books and drawing.
  I put others before me,
  In every possible way.
  I’ve never known how to take care of myself.
  It’s always been Anna before me,
  No matter what she did to me.
  At least that hasn’t changed.
  Unlike everything else.
  Home
  I lock myself in our bedroom
  And by the thumping
  I’ve come to recognize
  As the worn soccer ball
  Beating against the back of the house,
  Anna’s taking her anger at me
  Out on the inflatable sphere.
  While I release my sadness
  By pressing slightly harder on my pencil
  And getting angry at myself
  Because her face is too dark.
Midnight Thoughts
  The blankets are too hot
  But the pure air is too cold.
  I toss and turn
  For what feels like an eternity
  But is only a few hour.
  Sighing,
  I release the demons in my mind.
  Letting them fly free
  Going in whichever direction they please,
  As they drag me around in their wake.
  
  Midnight Discoveries
  
  Just as I’m beginning to lose myself
  In the mess of wings and feathers,
  My fingers reach for my locket
  And catch on a clasp
  I never noticed before.
  Hands shaking like I’ve just run a marathon,
  I carefully undo the latch,
  And a piece of paper falls into my hand.
  I fumble around in the dark for the lamp,
  And once the light hits the note,
Everything
Changes.
Midnight Memories
  We were fighting over something stupid,
  Not even worth an argument,
  Never mind what it turned into.
  It ended with me
  Red faced
  Screaming into her face,
  About how I never loved her
  And how much of a failure she was.
  She didn’t respond
  Just left the room.
It was the last time I ever saw her.
  
  Midnight Realizations
  They said she was gone.
  Committed suicide.
  And that it was all my fault.
But it wasn’t.
Because she’s still alive.
The Note
My dearest Sam (and I’m sure Anna too),
I’ll only say one thing,
This is not your fault.
  I  just need a break.
  A change of scenery.
  I’ll wait for you,
  If you want to join me,
  At our spot
  Everyday for three months.
  If you don’t come,
  I’ll move on without you.
  If you do,
  We’ll travel the country together.
  It will be a much better education
  Than any school could ever provide.
Either way I love you infinitely,
--Mom
Earthquake
  What happens after an earthquake?
  Where your whole life is ripped apart
  And thrown into the vast sea of unknown?
  You find someone
  And hold on tight.
Aftershocks
  
  Suddenly,
  Anna is beside me.
  Taking the paper from my trembling hands.
  She reads it
  And wordlessly pulls me into a hug.
  I normally avoid contact at all costs,
  But I melt into her embrace.
  
  Opposite Universes
  Eventually,
  Anna pulls away.
  She looks me directly in the eyes,
  And asks the question she already knows the answer to,
  “Are you going to go?”
  “Are you?”
  I ask the real question,
  The elephant in the room,
  Or at least in my mind.
  Anna barely thinks before her mouth opens,
  “No.”
  My heart sinks,
  And I begin to pick at a thread
  On my sweatpants.
  Because I already have my answer.
And it doesn’t match hers.
Times Changing
  Anna’s always been the risk taker.
  The one to take great leaps
  Into the vast unknown.
  I
  Have always stuck to safety.
  Normality.
  Whatever will give me a sense of security.
  It’s funny
  How we’ve suddenly switched places.
Decisions
  
  For the next week,
  Anna’s scolding
  Turns into threatening
  Which finally morphs into begging.
  Suddenly,
  She can’t live without me,
  When she’s always acted
  Like she can’t live with me.
One Reason
  Come Saturday,
  I find Anna clutching my packed backpack,
  Sitting cross legged on my bed,
  And begins ranting away.
  “Why do you want to leave?
  Dad takes care of us just fine!”
  While a million reasons fly through my head,
  There’s only one clear answer:
“Because it’s time I do what’s best for me.”
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