Like the bulls in every existing china shop, we danced clumsily past midnight.
The soles of our feet sticking to the hardwood floor of my living room, twirling, dizzy-- in hopes that if our souls learned how to tango, minute hands would cease to spin.
It was holy bliss. It was the sweat shop factory of affection. Our bodies-- luminous in the palest moonlight, a passerby might have believed we were angels.
Even now, as we sit in the midst of silent tension, furrowed brows of frustration with no words left to promenade out of our jaded bodies,
I watch your chest rise and fall to the hostile melody of our fruitless accusations, each breath a reminder of our dance.
Your soul is still liquid music to my ears. And as long as it continues to play, I will stay, the hem of my dress floating in motionless air-- waiting for midnight to intertwine our silhouettes.