
Prosery: Let the Last Breath Linger
some memories, like thin bells,
vanishing, a song faint and low.
A summer of being. Thirteen. Surrendering my mornings to the public library—piles of books, biblichor, waiting quiet as secrets. Quiet as a librarian’s finger to her lips: shush. I devoured the Dewey Decimal System. It became a fiery furnace in me, a puzzle burning with unambiguous order and sequence.
clutch the old ways of my heart,
the old part of light that I wore.
133.43: anything in the 100s was philosophy and psychology. But 133.43 was in the restricted area—by permission only. I memorised all the Remington-typed cards in that category, much like Mum read James Michener. Or Dad read addresses while delivering the post. My lips mouthed titles and authors—I hid in a dark corner, reading about thaumaturgy on index cards.
“That girl—she’s a few sandwiches short of a picnic,” I overheard Mum tell the neighbours, and they all laughed. It’s a joke, she told me.
And I slipped books back into their xxx.y=place, next to their familiars—a cosy fit, as if tucking the night into bed and switching off the light. Leaving them in a vacuum where no stars shine. Leaving them with their parts of speech and surprise endings, in silence and breathless.
they are kindly closed and put away,
but I don’t rest where they stay.
Some artwork is created using Midjourney AI, and is identified as such in the ALT text or captioned. Images are copyright and not to used without permission, which I willingly give when asked, and when not for commercial use. Imagery and poems/prose ©Misky 2006-2025.
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