About a million prairie miles roll out slow from sparkling eyes. Each night, beneath a blanket of melting white noise that distance wraps around your toes and takes its sweet time with every aching inch.
If I could sell you a story from pursed lips a half-inch beneath my reddened, runny nose who knows if you'd believe it? But I might get rich if you were buying my slurring, supine words.
I could buy you. A new coat. With your coin. And I'd borrow it for the winter. 'Cuz mine's all full of holes that breathe too hard. Like me, on my long walks home through streetlights and snow. Like you, in your bed tonight carving words in your wall, in the dark, with tongue tucked tight behind your crooked, perfect, lovely teeth.
A coat's no good in Summer (save to improvise a pillow when I sleep on friends' floors). But you can sell me back my story, (half-cost, I'd hope...). And--just maybe--I could swallow your million prairie miles, and stomach five more months of Sundays... To read your wall. Aloud.