I saw you on the plane. The small crook of your neck turned outward and resting along the shoulder-line of another man. How many lives will it take to shake your phantoms from my spine?
We made eye contact disembarking and, awash with turbulent shadows of an old unyielding guilt, I said nothing. There is a regret that exists, deeper and more exacting within the shells of lives we shake off and carry behind us— tin cans attached to the wedding car we will never drive.