I know we haven’t talked in a while. Not since I recognized the decisive crack of your voice like a crinkling plastic gum wrapper and I let the phone fall. That was five years ago and I don’t know where you are now. But I’m writing this because I can’t stop writing about you and your shapes and your smells and you and white powder and you and religion and religious books neatly stacked and you and every piece of you and a rickety black tram bursting forth in the darkness and you and pockets of light that sometimes shine through in cocoons or at elegant dinners and you and aftershave and blood and muddy river water and you and flowers in porcelain vases and couches encased in plastic and you and I am endlessly backtracking to silent violations and black midnights riddled with hunger and confusion and I don’t know maybe some other time and it’s like our hands and wrists are bound together as though bandaged and the whites of my eyes are permanently reddened by an invisible fire’s breath or the glow of your face and even now everything won’t stop shaking and I just stare at my hands and tiles and patterns in carpets and I keep staring and staring forever only at things that won’t move away from me like inanimate objects but I’ll leave you here with a letter I’ll never mail because I’m no longer the quivering little girl beneath you and I’ll get ****** up again and think this is freedom, isn’t it? churning sweetness and liberality into my empty stomach? but then why does my mouth still taste like metal?