You asked me if I remembered your name, and I missed the syllables and vowels holding place, pushing away space, making a sound in my mouth that resonated with the word that I called you, when you were younger still and wondrous. I had forgotten the shape my mouth made when it moved it's way around the vowels and consonants that pulled themselves together across a tag and I lost memory of how your name came to me in the dizziness of sleep and exhaustion, how it escaped my lips in a mellow murmur, as you plucked a hazy goodbye out of it. I thought of the last time I said it out loud, the way it felt in my mouth and the taste it left, and how you took away it's meaning and made it sound forbidden. So I told you that I didn't remember the name I used to say to steady myself, inked to a piece of my skin, I told you that I forgot the taste of it in my mouth; sweet and sickly and I told you that I had forgotten it in many mouths since. I plucked away the shrug from your shoulders and wore it on mine as you walked away, down a street into someone else's car, as I only said a familiar chant, that made my lips quiver with reminiscence; a soft tremble for who I was.