I remember my teenaged phantasm and I lace soft boots to draw tall grass and sand dunes and hothotsummer, a pair of teenaged lips on my teenaged lips in sundown, the little wreckage of the family behind walls invisible from distance, and the perfect quiet of strong teenaged hands, the I-never-want-to-leave only in that we know so certainly we will come fall— the beauty in the shooting of the star and not the star.
I tilt the rearview, sweater on, and leave to you. I picture the soft reeds and pebble beach with-you-near-you and I think how I could take you there and live a baby flame fantasy with a flair for the dramatics and more fallapart than meets the eye or the mind’s eye, even.
I could kiss you behind clapboards like goodbye is on the weekend and cry to Cassiopeia that why-does-good-always-*******-go-away.
But it doesn’t always, not just yet, and so I leave my young Hollywood vision to my young Hollywood visionary and I take your hand to pass the quiet sad beach at miles on miles an hour, because I want you for longer than the starry summer and Dad’s averted eyes.