
Photo: Smadar Halperin-Epshtein
Look at that thing
With the wings,
Can it fly
Or can it sing?
Should we poke it?
Better not.
Press the fence
That keeps out tots.
For the JusJoJan daily prompt

Photo: Smadar Halperin-Epshtein
Look at that thing
With the wings,
Can it fly
Or can it sing?
Should we poke it?
Better not.
Press the fence
That keeps out tots.
For the JusJoJan daily prompt

Photo: Fabrizio Verrecchia on Unsplash
It was to be a fervent
Vow
For all the things their souls
Allow
For hopes and dreams, and yet
Somehow
The time and place did not
Allow
And left them both perplexed,
What now?
For Linda Hill’s SoCS (and JusJoJan) challenge

Photo: Diego PH on Unsplash
I heard her wish
Upon a star
For what she hoped
Life’s tears won’t mar.
“May it be a
Stellar year,
Where future skies
Shine bright and clear.
Where truth holds sway
Where justice weighs
Where children can with parents
Stay.”
I heard her wish
Upon a star,
And prayed it echoed
Wide and far.
Thank you to the Ragtag Daily Prompt team for this apt prompt – I hadn’t participated as frequently as I might’ve wanted to, but I always enjoyed it when I did, and I hope to continue to do so in 2020. Also thank you all in this lovely WordPress community, for the many other prompts and company and comments and delight and creativity through the year! I’m so grateful! Wishing you all a happy, healthy, just, joyful, hopeful 2020, and may it herald a better decade than the one just closing.
For the RDP Tuesday Challenge: Stellar

As chores went, this was her favorite.
Granted, she made sure to keep her face flat and convey just enough tremulousness to allow it to be seen as challenging. Her superiors liked giving her challenges that needed overcoming. Especially when those could be served along with mundane duties.
She wasn’t supposed to have any, so she hid her preference. Yet inside her she rejoiced every time she was assigned the task. She was expected to approach every detail with utmost diligence, no matter the dexterity required. And at any height. Even on a rickety ladder.
Others trembled doing this, too, but hers was with pleasure, not fear. It felt like flying. She took her time, and the results were pleasing enough to be noticed. Or perhaps it was the added bonus of not having candle-wax drip onto one’s head mid-prayer.
Because before long she was made Keeper of the Chandeliers.
For Crispina’s Crimson Creative Challenge

Aosta Valley, Italy (Carl Borg on Unsplash)
It had been a misty sunrise. The light rode soft atop the milky white outside.
He thought it was an omen and that she ought to stay in. “You won’t see where you’re going,” he fretted.
She told him the mist would clear. She could read it in the air. She could smell it in the tang of pine. She readied her day-bag and rushed through her chores.
Still he fussed. “What if not?”
She understood. She also knew he hadn’t grown up in these mountains. His roots did not go deep into this land, while her family traced their ancestry to the Ligures. Her people lived in these environs even before the Celts had arrived.
He feared what she did not.
In more ways than one, she realized.
It was another reason that she needed to take a long walk. Exactly so she could see where she was going.
For What Pegman saw: Aosta Valley, Italy

N. juncifolius, Carolus Clusius Rariorum stirpium 1576
He has a bit of complex,
Or lots more than
A bit.
A tremendous,
Big
Complex.
One that logic
He won’t allow
Beat.
Some believe
It’s destructively
Unique,
But in truth
It is just
Textbook
Case
Of the morbidly
Unfit.
For Sammi’s Weekend Writing Challenge: Complex in 41 words

Photo: Ian Schneider on Unsplash
In the years full of sorrows
They held on to the
Joys,
From the years when the
Smiles were more frequent than
Oys.
In the years where
Frustration
Overtook hope or
Peace,
They held on to conviction
That life can evil
Resist.
In the years where the wrong
Bloomed in hate
Unconcealed,
They held on to the truth,
So harm may be
Revealed.
In the years where they saw
Order crumble,
Laws evade,
They held on and remembered:
Hope finds way,
Light’s ahead.
For Linda Hill’s SoCS prompt: year

One needed a long leash.
One needed to be kept on a short one.
Metaphor for her life, it was.
She adopted both as babies. Whelped at the same time by the same stray dog, they were, and yet they could not be more different. People did not believe her when she told them that the two were litter-mates. Had she not seen it with her own eyes she might’ve doubted, too. She wondered sometimes if it was possible that they were fathered by two different dogs altogether.
A little like her own sons. Who had.
Only that she had survived her children’s births. Unlike the dog, who didn’t.
It had been a cold spell then as well. The roads had become ice-sheets and her breath had hovered so close that it was as if the air itself did not want to leave the warmth of her body for the arctic chill. A storm had been forecast and she’d just returned from the store with extra essentials when she’d heard the whine of something small and vulnerable coming from the crawl space under the house.
The laboring dog did not resist when she’d reached for the writhing pup. Panting and with her head hanging low, she just rose heavily to her feet and followed the pup to the garage. She must have recognized help, or perhaps she was just beyond protesting.
Three pups were born. One large, two small, one of which did not survive. Neither did the birthing mother, who suckled the pups but was dead by morning. Perhaps she bled internally or was too weak or otherwise beyond recovery. With the storm in full force there was no way to call the vet. Or to bury anything. She dragged the mother and babe outside, where the cold would preserve them till she could find a way to properly farewell them. And she took the two mewling wrigglers in. Where they’d stayed. Milo and Martin.
After her uncles. One robust and placid. One short and wily.
She’d padded a box with an old blanket, kept it by her bed, and set a timer. She’d fed them with an eye dropper first, then a turkey baster with a piece of cloth tied on for suckling. It wasn’t till their eyes opened and they’d began exploring that she’d let herself realize that she’d be keeping them.
And that they will be keeping her.
From the plans she’d been making.
Her sons no longer needed their mother. But the puppies did.
So she stayed.
And three years later, they were all still there.
One with his long leash. One with the short. And her, in the middle. Held by both.

Photo: El Cabildo © Preyes (Wikimedia Commons)
“Where are we going, Papi?” Ramon clung to his father’s belt.
“You’ll see.”
“But it’s a school-day, Papi.” If there was something — other than Jesus — that his parents held sacred, it was education. Though poor, his parents always managed to supply what he needed for school. In turn Ramon was expected to learn well and listen to his teachers. Skipping classes went against everything he understood.
“It will still be a day of learning,” Papi pedaled steadily over muddy paths, narrow roads, and into the city.
Ramon held on, in awe of his father’s ability to find his way in the maze.
A grand peach-colored building manifested.
“A palace, Papi?”
“A museum.”
“Of what?”
“Of us.”
Ramon shook his head. Museums are for the dead.
“We’re native Paraguayans, son. El Cabido is dedicated to our heritage. Our music. Our crafts. Today your school is the history of who you are.”
For What Pegman Saw: Asucion, Paraguay

Photo: Phil Botha on Unsplash
In his arrogance he sees
Himself reflected
In everything.
All positive is commandeered as his
Achievement,
Any negative is protested as
Insult to
Him,
To the supposedly undisputed
Glory
Of his being.
In his hubris he
Expects only effusive
Praise.
He demands fealty in all
Things.
Admiration to any idea he
Hijacks
To claim it was never invented
Prior to the mighty of
Him.
In his presumption he feeds on
Adoration
And punishes
All critic
As wounding the belief in
Him.
In his arrogance
He sees only,
Appreciates only,
Allows only what feeds
Him.
Disclaimer: No offense meant to the (truly magnificent) bird …
For Sammi’s Weekend Writing Prompt: Hubris in 94 words
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