I am pretty sure my love will be leaving me soon for a woman whose skirt does not lift in the zephyr of her sadness: we kiss and we tie maraschino cherry stems with our tongues. The same labyrinth puts rosy skin in our teeth, here is his ***** hair knotted with saliva. When I think I have everything, it just means that we are stuck together – I realize it does not mean that we are happy together. I think someone poisoned the water with glue, and it is I who dispenses more to let my love escape me. He is as happy as a child who has finished a puzzle except for a single missing piece, repeating the movements again and again. That has got to bring it back. For seven months, we have been handed the gift of pretending I can feel the inner-workings of who he is and why he is and I am pretty sure he knows he never has to pretend again. It is there in the silences: across the room, across the ocean where hundreds of babies have died, babes with mothers and fathers and parents who weren’t divorced. All I hear is my love toying with a Rubik’s cube he never learned to complete. I have a Magic 8 ball saying I should let him go. I mostly worry about telling my mom, who will tell my therapist and then we will have to close too many doors. As long as I am sad, they are locked. A key is stuck in the mud or in someone’s molars – my room is empty, the air is quiet, and he has not even left me yet.
Probably the saddest thing I have ever written, or what I have written with the most sadness.