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A Fall to Remember
A cool autumn day,
recess and some go-gurt.
Childish giggling, amused by running.
Running and hollering a word at a touch,
A defining game.
It was a fall to remember.
You didn’t see what you avoided,
just a rock, steadfast in dirt.
She could’ve seen it.
Didn’t see it.
Six-year-olds aren’t known for grace.
Simply said:
It was a fall to remember.
You were five and
she was six and
no one was at fault
you didn’t even see but
because some random kid said so:
it was your fault.
For years.
It was a fall to remember.
Then, tears fell into the dirt,
giggling and hollers and running
exchanged for wails and shock.
And the four-word declaration,
four simple words that defined you.
It was your fault.
The last you’d see of her.
The last you’d hear of her.
Her fall
was one you’d remember.
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This piece is about something that happened when I was in kindergarten and my friend tripped on a rock and moved away.