She was like a shattered Judas,

born to be glued back together

with corpse money from Akeldama

and reassembled as the sin of her tribe

Watch her now:

fumbling at a cigarette in a ditched stripmall

raspy ruaḥ panting sheets of smoke

She slept on a bench today, who’d’ve thunk it?

and worshipped the false idols on her phone

She was like the castoff Aaron,

a beacon tinted gold

when the cow started grooving

blunting her with broken pacts

I envy her style:

punching a tree ‘till she screamed god-raw

dragged home to an empty bottle

and stuffing it with shivering liqueur 

topped with a chicken-scratch swan-song

She was like Lot’s wife

Salty, fleeing from crackling past,

unable to look towards indigo Zoar

She would water the angel-gagged land

It was too much for her:

a wayside swerved into woods,

that old cat blazing in her head

She remembered her name was Yael

and swallowed too dry to speak it

She was like the Ram

A funny joke; a scapegoat

The kind that Abraham shanked

for his shackled son

Her blood don’t spill:

it freezes atop Moriyyah and Sinai

those ghost peaks and puffed chests

When she fell, she fell way down

and scraped the moon with slit wrists

She was like withered Moshe

who croaked believing he had any control

He reddened waters, slammed stone breath,

but Mount Nebo swallowed his pride and mitzvot

She didn’t leave quietly:

with bandaged hands, she wrapped nylon 

’round a hook; a hanging home

She wasn’t like them, she wasn’t, she wasn’t

She was.

She was a shattered Judas

dangling in a dank room on the age of guilt

She was me

staring at the rope

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Avery London is a 15-year-old junior at Sacramento Waldorf School in Fair Oaks, CA. They’ve lived most of their life in the foothills of Northern California. As an Okinawan Jew, cultural and religious identity informs their fiction and nonfiction work. They are published in Cathartic Youth Literary Magazine, Ice Lolly Review, and Risen Zine. They enjoy experimental and free-verse poetry, and always love a good flash fiction piece over tea!