Dear lover, Remember the tattered throw rug we laid on, when I discovered your birthmark shaped like a tangerine on the back of your knee? We were velcro back then. You told me I had eyes of indigo and the corners of my cellars smelled of sweet honeysuckle in the fire months of summer. That summer, we marinated in our fresh air that filtered the stale, standstill atmosphere.
Now, the toolbox on the broken shelf, the set your tired father provided for you, is rusting at the hinges. Like you and me.
The saltwater my indigo sight produces, confronts the bolts and twists, corroding anything it touches. Lover, this can be reversed by binding our loops and hooks together. Lover, the tools have not yet been used and only you and I can discover each other again.