God Wouldn’t Do That To Me
Sam Brown
As the autumn leaves fall,
I reminisce on us.
I forgive myself
for how I lowered myself
for you — my false idol.
I had spent years
building myself up from nothing,
licking my wounds,
making amends for my wrongs.
I was growing into a woman
of trust,
faith,
serenity,
and grace.
I believed in you.
I trusted you.
I was always a game to you —
a pawn on your board of control.
Checkmate.
God wouldn’t do that to me.
I wish I could gather
all my fallen tears,
gasps of desperation and pleas,
my thoughts of inadequacy,
doubt,
fear,
envy,
torture,
and illusion —
and hand them to you.
They don’t belong to me anymore.
Let them haunt you now,
so you can finally feelwhat I’ve felt
for years.
I don’t need answers
for irrelevant questions anymore.
God wouldn’t do that to me.
I am an angel
wrapped in the devil’s skin.
I wear the markings of the beast,
the burn marks from your touch.
As I kneeled to you,
you scorched my flesh
and tried to infest my soul.
But my soul
was never yours.
God wouldn’t do that to me.
I pray for your salvation.
And as I walk
into this new life,
I hope you watch
from the biggest screen
sold to the masses.
I was always made to shine.
I was always meant
to have my hands kissed,
doors opened,
and my heart held
by the hands that weave gold —
not by a man
who would ever
lay his hands on me.
God wouldn’t do that to me.