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The Angel's Shadow

The Quarry Takes on Supernatural Form

By Rebecca A Hyde GonzalesPublished 4 months ago 1 min read
The Angel's Shadow
Photo by Daniel Ramos on Unsplash

It was not fire.

It was not voice.

It came clothed in wings

that cut the air like blades,

each feather a shard of light.

I saw it at the mouth of the storm—

halo fractured,

eyes burning as if lit

by the grief of creation itself.

I reached for my bow,

but my hands dissolved.

I called out,

but my throat filled with ash.

The angel turned,

not to flee,

but to remind me

that pursuit is always

a kind of worship.

Its shadow passed over me,

a veil vast as night,

and in that darkness

I felt my own shape falter—

as if my body

were only the echo

of something I had forgotten.

When the light broke,

it was gone.

But the ground where it walked

still trembled,

and the sky would not

return to silence.

nature poetry

About the Creator

Rebecca A Hyde Gonzales

I love to write. I have a deep love for words and language; a budding philologist (a late bloomer according to my father). I have been fascinated with the construction of sentences and how meaning is derived from the order of words.

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