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"The Broken Virgin" (c) Copyright, "Susan Abraham"
"2006"
All Rights Reserved. No Copy/Duplication Allowed.
E-Mail: abrahamsusan2003@yahoo.co.uk
And so she sat now in her innocence,
and wept like a woman, whose body stretched too old for love, whose delicious sheen, turned past the tide to go elsewhere, who lost her skin somewhere on the high slippery sea of grief where she tripped and fell, on a needle-sharp shell that would, gorge her flesh like human sticks and smash the trollop in her waiting heart. And when she had thought they must part while soaking in the unseen bloodstain on the fabric, that had clothed her purity on the bright light in the slashing poison of the night, to make a wall of shame and that was how he found her his broken virgin, near her hut in the river with her finished game, and her shattered splintered name. Her nudity jarred him in the eye when he played I-spy to make her stare and shiver and quickly catch the glimmer before it went away again and she no longer remembered him. But today, look how tame her breasts, like tiny cones and silent to growing ambitions and now still untouched by the old-fashioned pull of desire, how thin her legs that had wheedled and swung past him with nary a scream. And that was how he found her at last, at last never to return to the hollow of her sorrow where a damsel's moment breaks and love catches up on its terrifying ache, now he must turn around and run away again, would the sea wash up her long black hair into his thoughts, even as he sought to remember its scent like a hidden magnolia a soft unsuspecting rose, and the tide would finally rise up to his nose as he drowned in the everlasting moment of her blistering sexual burn.
A short bio:
Susan Abraham is a Malaysian writer, traveller and poet. She
worked as a fashion journalist for several years and has had poetry
published in the small literary presses in England and children's plays
aired over Radio Malaysia.
She is currently working on her first novel and divides her time between
Kuala Lumpur and London.
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