I find myself in a coverless Italian summer. Grass browned. Skin freckled. I find myself impatient, no longer willing to entertain the destinies of the salt and sea. I edit video of you in a cobbled basement. There's a knowing look that lasts four seconds. I split it into six fragments and set it in reverse, an unknowing, a deletion. The crook of your neck and shoulder blade. The red of your hair. Some nights I hang from the rails. Five minutes. Ten. And pull myself up. Tented and mad by August, stabbing ice with a little black cocktail straw. How can I change my How can I love my How can I erase my body? The rains wet me. The wind wrings me. This city we used to walk under streetlights. Now I bike through, pedaling, furious and blind, toward a place I don't know until I arrive, and I kiss a young woman who looks a lot like me. I ask her to say my name over and over. I want to fully occupy the moment, the space, this time. Her lips remain closed and her hands linger on my shoulders and no music plays and there are voices, loud and happy, speaking a language that's completely new.