I didn't hold tendons between my fingers like street boys on rain city rooftops, crumpling their futures up to smash into shredded jeans, shredded hearts, some wrappers escaping, flying over this city as our neglectful witnesses.
Their hands were broken bottles. The black top made my guts look like escaping snakes, my eyes hoping to be Medusa. Fictionalizing gets me through most things. Sometimes pain tastes like metal, sometimes like cherries.
I stare at the sideways sunset, a wrapper spit up and drying out, a pipe dream promise; reviewing my time strips as if they'd had a spelling change, recounting every drop of blood word and smile. Sometimes I forget that I'm real. Sometimes I'm not.