I wanted to write you into a love poem, But all I can conjure Is a picture of a girl crying off her mascara On a stoop in the south of Chicago, Smeared burgundy lips wrapped around One Thin cigarette, And the man she used to love Entering the scene upon his exit From the doorway with it’s crumbling yellow paint, Pale, now, in the rising moonlight, Faded from Two Decades of wind and rain, And the gun he’s hiding behind his back – “Come in,” he says to her – Voice shaking in the cold December night, And she says Three Words in return, Breath rising like a halo around her lips, But it’s lost to the wicked wind, And he raises his hand and puts Four Slim, flattening bullets Into her, and the Five Children they had together Come running Just as the church bells ring, Announcing the arrival of the hour Six.
You can find more of my poetry at caitlincacciatore.wordpress.com