The frigid air catches between her shoulder blades
winding the wings of the key.
She begins to shiver to life as gears are set to motion.
The wooden bench shrinks,
her lips begin to part and let out
balmy breath of steam
a smog that fogs his glasses.
She’s wound and bound to kiss him.
He wants this, too.
His engine begins to putter
as he begins to pucker.
Their cold lips meet,
and while an explosion in her core smolders,
he feels like a machine,
running through the motions,
trying to produce magic,
but feeling artificial.
A bolt must be *******,
a wire out of place,
something is jamming his gears,
a rhythm out of beat.
He should feel alive.
He should want this.
He should want this.
Its just animatronics.
Aren’t men built to love women?
He pushes her face off his.
Anxiety fills his pipes and dew begins to condensate,
while the fire in her eyes are put out by the black
like oil streaking her face.
He’s sorry.
He’s so sorry.
He hurt her.
He hurt a friend.
Wind so white fills the distance between them
His wet hands grab her red mittens,
but she flinches and protects them like tiny finches
and puts them back inside her cage,
safe in her black pocket,
and walks away, leaking,
busted and broken.
White erases her.
He’s left to be a Tin Man who wants to rust in the snow.
A dent has shattered his almost love,
and a first kiss he wished he missed.
Just a work in progress like all my other poems. Experimenting with sides of a poem.