I'm in love with a girl who washes her hair in her bathroom sink every morning. Truth be told, She washes it in the kitchen, But I wouldn't want anyone to get the wrong idea. Let's backtrack for a minute. You see she has a shower right behind her But she hasn't used it since the day the water ran red. She tells me she likes the way dirt looks under her fingernails, The way people on the street wonder if she's lazy Or just excavated a body. But what's the difference right? Either way you find yourself in a hole. I wait for her in the kitchen every morning. Hand her her coffee. Watch her stare into the yard as she sips. I mention the birds and she sighs something about the night she had to chase away the neighbors cat. How she wishes her father would stop feeding them. But you see, I've heard this story a hundred times. And though the ending's always different, Nothing really changes. Her dad keeps feeding the birds, And her uncle keeps dying. Sometimes it's an accident, sometimes it's a disease. Either way he ends up in a hole And her dad only comes home when the birds get hungry. I picture her sitting cross legged on her grass, Her eyes envying the way it always shines green, And I get lost in thoughts of how I'd like to make her my emerald. But you see she's always wanted to be a diamond, And there's just not enough warmth in my soul, Or pressure in my hips To give her that. You see she washes her hair in the kitchen sink everyday Because her best friend killed himself when she was eleven And let the blood run down the drain. She dyes her hair the color of a crime scene, But forgets the caution tape. She says she hates the mirror in her bathroom and the way the lighting makes her look, But I've never once seen her bother to open the window. You see I never minded though Because the longer she stayed in the dark, The longer I got to pretend to be her sunshine.