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Father, Rising MAG
  A passionate
  gardener, he enjoyed planting
  poppies in the backyard –
  raspberries and tomatoes too, and you sunk
  your teeth into their jeweled ruby skin,
  enamel glittering with sugared juice.
  The day before the war stole him,
  the sunset died to a slow ember, burning
  cities to the ground. A ladybug landed on
  your wrist and he laughed at how it
  danced across the soft meat
  of your palm. He taught you
  how to dig holes into the pulsing heart of the land,
  germinating apple seeds and begonias.
  “The earth must fall before it rises,” he told you,
  eyes sparkling like the raw, pink flesh of a newborn.
  “It empties itself so that new life can bloom.”
  Before he boarded the plane that carried him off
  into thick August blood – the architecture of
  foreign cities shrinking to the size of a
  cherry pit – he pressed his lips to the rose of your cheek,
  hoping you’d realize he was speaking about
  more than the land.
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