A blinding fall reflected off lakes in greens and browns almost a year removed from wide-eyed walks across the Borden Avenue Bridge, counting steps and calculating just how many sweaters you’d have to layer for it to seem accidental.
November was dragging and you weren't trying to impress. You drove to school and didn't go to class. You thought I’m flexing, you thought I’m finding my feet, you thought thinking was overrated.
You smoked cloves on benches, let bracelets rot off your wrists, followed every ‘person you may know’ on Twitter.
Holed up in libraries across the Shoreline, you read Vice, posed for pictures with strangers and made friends with Cat Marnell but she never texted back. You played with words in a way that started to smell nice.
December was still lucent, your curvy cheeks and sloping thighs receded into something new-giggling and compact. When you skipped finals and failed every class, you shrugged, deleted the emails and got really into makeup.
Winter was a dizzy dazzle of new pills and old clothes and a pallor that crept just on the line of ***, glitter and death.