Let’s pretend you’re someone else I whisper to my champagne camry: a green monster
truck or a slim chopper fueled by havoc. I enact the same fantasy stroking my neck beard in the mirror.
Will these bottle cap earrings compromise my don’t **** with me aura? What about magenta nail polish? What about blue irises?
Those brown halos around your pupils: the first and only time my lips sheltered yours. I gripped your arm and swallowed some spit, letting my mustache
pins tickle your stubbly chin. You, too, are a memory I displace in reflection. I’d never do that again and I really haven’t—it was the white stuffed in our noses,
it was because no one else was around. We were friends; I’m still too young for exile. Although I admit that the red lips I’ve drained
since have never turned blue like yours, that potent indigo camouflaging your bushy eyebrows and sasquatch legs.
In the driver’s seat I spot the burn streak on the frayed ceiling —the accidental joint bristling the top after the momentary us.
I could've let the ash tumble among the crevices instead of blighting the interior, but I didn’t. Instead a black indelible
Rubicon, one I surely hadn’t mean to cross, greets me every time I strap myself to the wheel of this engine.
Let’s pretend I’m someone else I recite in the rear view mirror. The pretty woman at the drive thru window slides her number between
the fries & burger combo. I’ll never call, but I keep the napkin in my wallet, on the off chance that one day I’ll be someone who would.