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We parked at the service route junction just beyond midnight, headlights cut, pretending we didn’t notice the clock approaching curfew on my last night in town. Through the sunroof, the stars looked like a dull reflection of the tree-framed skyline. We stared out in silence, our January breath clouding the windshield. You were the first to move: your hand smacked the radio to silence Third Eye Blind’s “How’s It Going to Be,” but it was too late. The strumming autoharp and refrains of “you don’t know me anymore” had already filled the car with longing for a love we hadn’t lost yet.
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Jul 2, 2014
Jul 2, 2014 at 3:43 PM UTC
Dix Hill
We parked at the service route junction just beyond midnight, headlights cut, pretending we didn’t notice the clock approaching curfew on my last night in town. Through the sunroof, the stars looked like a dull reflection of the tree-framed skyline. We stared out in silence, our January breath clouding the windshield. You were the first to move: your hand smacked the radio to silence Third Eye Blind’s “How’s It Going to Be,” but it was too late. The strumming autoharp and refrains of “you don’t know me anymore” had already filled the car with longing for a love we hadn’t lost yet.
shelleyzw
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Jul 2, 2014
Jul 2, 2014 at 3:43 PM UTC
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