We catch the sunset while eating breakfast: ignoring mothers, ignoring landlords, skinning our knees and skipping supper, using the kitchen with some improvisation, forgetting to stir the pasta, blotting bacon with coffee filters, flinging linguini on the walls and the ceilings (for if cooked it will cling but if raw it will fall). “Is that pasta on the wall?” “Is it purple?”
Outside a boy in a dress shirt and a girl in a paisley skirt walked past the window, holding hands and clutching palm Sunday leaves.
Then the strand of linguini began to detach itself from the ceiling, like a break dancer, with flimsy limbs, and when it dropped it fell through the air like an Olympic diver, twirling and curling with two ends clung to one another and then unfolding underwater.