You carried the scent of a heavy summer rainfall with you everywhere you went, dropping hurricanes from your pockets for strangers who have only known spring showers. I didn’t know it was possible to fall in love with a storm. Every time your cloudless eyes met mine I felt a swell in the back of my throat, as if I had drank too much seawater and you just kept staring until I began to cough up the entire Pacific Ocean. You told me that this is what it meant to be with you, to be with a nihilist. You held other worlds on your fingertips and slipped them under my tongue, my blood becoming bellicose within it’s own veins. The parabola of my pupils stretched until they became quasars, I had never known energy like this before. Your lips twitched into a most complacent grin at my lack of self-possession as I writhed in the rapacious wake of the river. Everything around me shimmered with the light of 1,000 stars and I heard centuries of music in your laughter. I was a foreigner in a different world. That night we made love with the intensity of 50 lightning bolts striking an erupting volcano and it was the first time you told me you loved me. It was the only time you meant it. We anesthetized each other so much that you became insusceptible while I became hypersensitive. You carved kisses into my skin and they were wonderful but I was starting to bleed out. But you couldn’t even feel my nails as I tried to dig my way into your heart. I had never wanted to live inside a person so badly, but you can’t make homes out of people. You can’t make homes out of addicts.