not the electric slick slide of soles on glass,
or the ice that shook me on the stairs—
what use are slippers against tempests?
Those things I couldn’t reuse, I left
scattered like lentils on a dress of ash.
Hurricane in a pumpkin, we dressed my
carriage with my skirts as a sail.
Mice are better than rats, nimble rescuers,
enough fairy magic left to bless passing squash,
disemboweled into a fleet of floating gourds
escaping on the tide as the moat rose, waves crashed.
As the clock struck midnight I looked up in fear,
not of losing wishes or princely kisses, but at clouds
leaving blood in their tracks. I ran, prince with one shoe went
for help, but now we float tethered to branches of hazel and willow.
When the waters subsided, we cleaned together, hands
clasped, my limping, blind sisters grateful to learn to survive.
I wept in the muck and turtle doves carried us seeds. My love
first kissed me in that field, sparkling shoe embracing life as a trowel.
The story doesn’t mention that the former prince sold a marvelous
slipper to feed our people through winter. Or that our wedding
happened amidst the rubble, my dress of sailcloth, his suit of rags,
attended by survivors, busy rebuilding a city and not a castle.
Twitter @AmandaBergloff
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