In the town that lost its daughters
In the town that lost its daughters to a single blast, the boys grow up with no one to kiss them out of their iron ideas and back into the velvet touch of the living room couch. Naturally they will kill each other i n a later act. No one plays with the dolls and stuffy's and lovey's so the dolls and stuffy's and lovey's are not played with, and, seeing this to be so, bank the latent glow behind their painted lids and recede back into plastic, and the trees, seeing this, know that the animus has left the place and stop whispering their pine-scented secret to Saturday afternoons and the crow and the occasional pair of pigtails that used to listen in and giggle at their pluck, now embarking on their return to inanimate exchange of sunlight, water, and a sugar y ou've read about but can't taste. The roads are repaved remarkably straight, what with everyone knowing where they’re going and no one not knowing enough a...