a soldier

Olivia Bennett

a soldier.

a cog in the clock

just a piece in the war machine

he has a gun in hand and a helmet around his head

a wife and child back home

the faces he sees, they stay with him

pictures that he sketches in the dark of night

when the bombshells provide the only light

each day that passes

the gun moves closer to his pillow

protecting his small cot from the horrors outside

layers and layers of grime, blood, and dirt

coat the skin of the man who was

the war ends, and his gun never leaves his hip

back home, the battle wages on

behind his eyes and below his heart

his fingers, barrels; his wife’s earrings, grenade pins

his son’s face is the afghan boy

small and round and suddenly half gone

screaming for his daddy to come back

the man cannot escape

behind his eyes are gray and red

the colors of the war-torn sky

he finds it hard to breathe

with a gun to his skull

the screams never reach past the empty house

his wife’s frigid fingers around severing papers

bruises color their skin like clouds after rain

or of orange and red explosions

in the lull of night

he paints the walls in their faces, of the men he’s killed

the curtains cry for violence

loneliness tugs at his vision

the war follows him like a shadow

as constant as the rain that falls outside his window

the silence screams, and he screams back

for he’s afraid it might consume him

driving to the store, he must be silent

for bombs in his stomach might ring out once again

the sun streams in through tattered curtains

glinting off of the dusty medallions and pins

inscribed with what he once was

the man has become the war

and the war has seized the man

never to return again.