I've always loved to be loved.
I look down upon myself, endlessly gazing at my reflection in the spring, reminded of my late twin sister's beauty. Of my beauty.
I cannot leave now.
The air is no longer air. It has shifted—throttling my lungs as it flows through—like breathing has reversed somehow. Light-headed nausea tangles my mind, my guts.
My skin, it mottles. Bones soften, wilt. I strain toward the sun.
My feet take root. Become roots, drawing sustenance from below.
At this spring, I've been reborn while I watch. And although I remain Narcissus, I am flowering.
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alt="Denied by J.B. Corso"
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alt="Winter Feast by Pauline Yates"
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