"Your poetry is lonely," he said, "Yet you write to feel less alone."
"I know," I answered the way wind answers a hot afternoon jogger on the highway's edge. There was a silence, the only noises were the keys of his old typewriter
click clacking away at themselves, "I'm sorry," I sobbed. He got up and walked to the door, put his hand on the doorknob, opened his heart
and faced me once more, "It wasn't meant to hurt you, Love. That's the last thing she said to me and life is too precious to waste thinking everyone's out to get you."
With that he left me to my thoughts, replaying the scene again and again, maybe I should get a typewriter myself to write my story just as powerfully as he wrote his. To be in some young person's dream, inspiring them the way he does for me. . .
Inspired by Ian Thomas's "The Infinite Distance" http://www.iwrotethisforyou.me/2012/05/infinite-distance.html