Cracked Sidewalks
by Rya Sheppard
I
said No, but he insisted
that
he inscribe his name and number
on
the palm of my hand, branding me
with
the black ink of his pen.
He
looked at me then, his eyes
yellow
and flashing
synchronous
with the lights
in
the club. His smile
like
a frown, his brows furrowed
and
teeth gnarled.
I
left then,
stepping
out into the crisp
air
of night, the black sky above
reflected
his face, and told me
to
run, so I ran,
cracks
in the sidewalk, tripping
stumbling,
threatening to break
the
back of the mother who
raised
me to fear no man.
I
fear this man,
I
fall on a crack in the sidewalk,
and
on my way down I see
a
daisy sprouting from
the
concrete, bright and white.
How beautiful, I think.
* * * * *
Rya Sheppard is a fiction writer from Kellogg, Idaho. She
studied creative writing at the University of Idaho and hopes to attend
graduate school in the fall. She spends most of her free time writing stories
and poetry or spending time with her cat, Zoey.
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