I watched as he filled the suitcase
with neatly folded jumpers and knitted socks.
Besides the woollen scarf he placed
hand-picked memories
where printed smiles and crooked teeth
stained the pages of a shrivelled album.
If only he knew how to tuck the twisted branches
of the walnut tree beneath those crumpled jeans,
if he could bottle the sign of the lonely moon
in a jar, now used for preserved pickled lemons.
If only he could fold the yawn of dusk and slip
her speckled embers between layers of pressed shirts,
scatter the constellations between empty pockets
and squeeze the kaleidoscope of dusk’s laughter
into the ripped hems of a ruffled blouse.
I watched as he sealed the lid
with an easy turn of a lock and key.
© Maria Zeb
Maria is a student studying English and Creative Writing at University of Birmingham. She explores and experiments with various literary forms, often subverting traditional notions of style, form and language. To contact Maria email:
Email: maria9357@outlook.com