I remember
Our last kiss.
It was purple.
It happened
The day after
I got a black eye.
The black eye
Came from you.
Followed by the kiss.
It was a Saturday afternoon,
An ordinary day,
A day that started
Like any other.
We were at home,
I was doing laundry,
The washer started leaking.
Water ran all over the
Dirty tile floor.
(I really needed to wash that floor,
Even before the leak,
But somehow never could find the time.)
I wiped the water up
With an old, threadbare towel,
And wondered aloud
Did I need to call a plumber?
You didn’t answer my question,
But screamed at me instead.
The wet floor and the broken washer
Somehow all my fault,
At least according to you.
You said nothing about
Calling the plumber.
Whatever went wrong
In life and in your little world
Was always my doing.
I protested,
Accidents happen,
Things break,
How was I to blame?
You were being
A total jackass,
Pardon my French.
I think I called you that,
Or something else equally bad,
I really don’t remember.
In the heat of the moment,
Who knows what I said.
At any rate,
I said something
You didn’t like
Called you some
Vile, evil name.
We all say
Things we later regret,
But in this case,
I think you deserved my wrath.
You reached out
And hit me
With a raised fist.
Hit me
In the face,
Just below my left eye,
My glasses flew off,
Disappearing behind the dryer,
Which stood next to that still leaking washer.
I stood shocked and blinded.
Somehow the greatest insult of all
The fact that I couldn’t see,
I had been blind to your true colors
For many years.
Later,
I crawled on my hands and knees,
Behind the dryer, searching and discovering
Somehow those glasses didn’t break.
Not sure how that was possible,
With the force of your punch,
But at least I could see.
The only thing that broke was my spirit,
And the blood vessels under my delicate skin,
Resulting in my black eye,
A glorious bruise.
Testament to our marriage.
I believe you knew
Just what you were doing that day.
Your hand was not open
Not relaxed,
You had a clenched fist,
Rigid, hard.
Like you,
Unfeeling,
Judgmental.
You were
A stone cold killer
With dark brown eyes.
Or a heavyweight boxer in the ring,
Giving his opponent
A triumphant punch,
Making her pay.
Or maybe
It was the opposite,
You weren’t cold at all,
But red hot in your fury.
With fire in your eyes,
You knew
Exactly what you were doing.
I could see
The temper rising in you
Like a mercury thermometer.
If you were a color,
You would definitely be red.
You asked yourself,
How I could talk to you this way?
Didn’t I know my place?
After your punch,
We retreated
To our respective corners,
Though I don’t remember how
We ever fixed the washer.
The next day,
I know you felt bad
For hitting me,
That is.
At the same time,
You still felt justified.
The leaking washer was my fault,
And how dare I talk smack to you.
Didn’t I know my place?
At least that’s what
You probably asked yourself,
Though you didn't say it aloud.
Your fist had done
All your talking.
It wasn’t the first time.
You had hit me,
Nor would it be the last.
If I stayed with you,
That is.
I don’t know why
They call it
A black eye
Since it wasn't really black.
Instead, it was multicolored.
The blackness faded quickly,
And my eye soon turned purple.
I love you, honey.
I’m sorry.
The words fell carelessly
From your lips the next day,
And with your half baked apology.
I could tell you
Just wanted
Things to go back to normal,
Whatever normal was for us.
After your feeble words,
You gave me a kiss
Right on the lips,
I winced.
Though my lips were not hurt,
It was my left eye instead,
That was the injured party.
The makeup didn’t quite
Conceal the mark you left,
No matter how skillfully,
That makeup was applied.
I didn't want makeup.
Didn’t want to hear your words,
Didn’t want to feel your touch.
Both only brought me pain.
Your honey tainted words,
Somehow always tasted bitter.
And that kiss,
You surely believed
It a sweet kiss,
A kiss of forgiveness,
A solemn promise,
It’ll never happen again.
I didn’t taste the sweetness.
And to remind myself
Of the lingering pain
I bit my lip till it bled,
Knowing I would never feel
Your lips touch mine ever again.
It was our last kiss.
I could stand no more.
The blood started out red,
Then faded to a deep purple.
Your words
And the blood
Both falling from lips,
Were sickly sweet,
Metallic.
They tasted purple.
The same color as my eye.
Bruises and bloody lips eventually go away,
But I learned a painful lesson,
Represented by a color
For purple
Paints a vivid picture
Of women everywhere.
Ask Alice Walker.
She knows.
We women deserve the best.
Pride and promise, not pain.
We deserve our purple.
Women royal, we are.
Queens all,
In ancient times,
Only we wore
The sacred purple.
In modern times,
Aren’t we all still
Royal queens,
Though we may dwell
In low places.
We drag behind us
Heavy fur robes,
Clutched tightly
Around our shoulders,
Those robes worth
Their mauve shaded
Weight in gold.
We deserve the best,
To wear a crown,
With that royal purple robe.
Sometimes that crown
Is thorny,
Sometimes gold,
But it still rests
Above the deep purple.
Our flowing robes
Stained with crimson blood,
From those non-purples
Who beat us down.
Stained from the children
We push
Triumphantly from our loins,
Giving a mighty battle cry
As they enter this purple world.
Our tormentors may
Beat us
With fists, words,
Actions, slaps,
Pokes and prods.
And keep hitting us with
Sharp jabs of abuse,
Physical, mental,
Emotional knockout punches.
Until that crimson moment
Turns into a last kiss,
Red blood
Mixes with blue
Veined heartache tracks.
Bruises,
Fading memories,
Black eyes
Turn to purple
The colors
Swirl together.
Sometimes dark,
Sometimes light,
Tinged lilac,
Fresh scented springs
Of blooming hope.
We wear
Our purple proudly.
Though we may,
Bite our lips till they bleed,
A coagulated sign of life.
Reminding us that
Events and people,
Both good and bad,
Have created
Our life palette,
Mixing fiery reds
And peaceful blues.
The artist has formed us,
Uniquely,
Creatively.
We are it.
Both artist and creation,
Life itself.
A living, breathing,
Wounded purple.
A sisterhood bleeding,
Pumping life’s blood,
Flowing sticky and warm,
Over all that is female.
Your last kiss
Both soothed
And tormented me.
Pain, power
Passion, promise.
Purple.
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11 comments
A sad story that I truly hope is fiction. I liked the style and the directness.
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Thank you.
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What an incredible story. While the theme is challenging, it was a pleasure to read your work.
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Thank you. I really appreciate positive feedback. It keeps me going as a writer!
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Love your rendition of the colour purple. The allusion to women suffering as well as the colour being the colour of royalty fitted the theme perfectly. The poetry/prose works well here.
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The prose and use of color is so brilliant and beautiful. This was outsanding!
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Thank you! I appreciate your comments. It helps motivate me to keep writing!
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Thanks. I like that writing style I must admit. Novels in verse are becoming more popular I think. Hoping anyways. Thank you for your comments.
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I love your style of writing and it certainly suits your theme here…thoughts coming in bursts. Great approach. To a topic too familiar to too many women. Will it ever end?😢😒
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Supremely royal!💜
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Thank you. Colors call to me apparently while writing.
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