Thrift shopping

The best thrift store in town 
is found through a revolving door
at the base of a lilac tree.
I went there today and bought
a wicker basket that begs to be filled
with rainwater and howls
when it leaks. I spotted it on a shelf
behind a bullet, a burning tower,
and an unbraided money tree.
My grandmother, the hummingbird,
tapped twice on the storefront window
and tossed a song through the glass
that went like this: twinkle twinkle
little light, I shouldโ€™ve held you
nice and tight, before you followed
bramble dreams that tore you open
at the seams. I pretended
not to hear her. I took my time
digging through rows of knick-knacks,
an appellate court of subjective utility.
Could I scrub the blood out of a used bandaid?
Do I really need another forgone conclusion?
Is $9.99 too steep a cost for a girl
about my age twisted up in the vines
of a velvet-leaf philodendron?
I saw my own face in a broken mirror
and wondered where it came from.
Who gives the suicides a second love
when they scrap their lives away?
I think I could. I think Iโ€™d take them out
for every summer storm
and hold them while they howled.

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