Wings

By Andrea Blythe

The needle inked the shapes of feathers—

wings folded, carved into the skin of his back.

He stretched, rolling his shoulders

as the tattooist paused, rested.

He felt the dual pink scars wrinkle then stretch.

There was an absence, an ache

between his shoulder blades he knew

ink could never fill. But for a moment

he pretended they were real, those strong black wings

peeling from his flesh, reaching up, tips pointed skyward.

Then, the tattooist resumed and the needle

was biting, biting, biting.

It was not God he missed, not Heaven.

It was the act of flight itself:

the taste of wind, the feel of freedom,

the near solidity of air cradled beneath his wings,

and far, far below, His most loved

children building castles of sand,

so small, so small.


Andrea Blythe is a substitute teacher and writer of poetry, fiction, and screenplays, living in Los Gatos, California. Her poetry has appeared in several small publications, including Perigee, Censored Poets, Ascent Aspirations, and Chinquapin. If you would like to learn more about her, you can email her at andreablythe@hotmail.com.