sweetheart, what have you done to us? you may have broken me I've enough pain to last the rest of my life all that's left to linger is meek wind through my wild hair you used to call me lover and now the sunshine doesn't touch my skin and my cursive is just as sloppy as my thoughts of you
sweetheart, strangers watch us through the night while we're sleeping poets have a certain touch of sadness in their eyes, a certain touch of sadness that only another poet could understand my violet lips taunt draw nearer the sapphire in my eyes warn keep your distance
you want to hear the words that separate whom I was to who I am but darling, it's not that simple I prefer to dream in silence there's a past I've never known and it reels me to this same place of searching without finding, of lonesome noon's of writing
We made love in your car once on the rooftop of a thirteen-story parking structure in Los Angeles city the faint smell of liquor warm on your breath the full look of night-sky ablaze in your eyes you mended my skin with soft parted lips sewing my wounds shut one kiss at a time
Itβs been six months since and now I sit here, alone in the parking lot of a train station some miles away from town observing the dismiss and arrive of lives I'll never get to be a part of my insides are still bleeding just as much as that night in the city when you held my naked skin in your mending arms / / sweetheart, you used to call me lover when I didn't know what love meant