I smoke every cigarette in the pack
long enough that the filters melted
and my lips blacken
like the nightsky,
when you stepped down
the granite staircase
in a burgundy bouclé dress
that radiated brighter than
the chandelier overhead.
All we ever had was enough.
Now I smoke to remember
the nights when the fog
followed us home
and the music of us
slow dancing in silence.
I pack my bags
and I leave my keys at your door.
You hold me close and you whisper:
"What the hell are you waiting for?"
Oct 27, 2013
Oct 27, 2013 at 12:19 AM UTC
I smoke every cigarette in the pack
long enough that the filters melted
and my lips blacken
like the nightsky,
when you stepped down
the granite staircase
in a burgundy bouclé dress
that radiated brighter than
the chandelier overhead.
All we ever had was enough.
Now I smoke to remember
the nights when the fog
followed us home
and the music of us
slow dancing in silence.
I pack my bags
and I leave my keys at your door.
You hold me close and you whisper:
"What the hell are you waiting for?"
