Just turned nineteen, we sat along the bottom of the bunk bed— holding hands and nothing else —reading from the big compilation of Bukowski poems that I kept folded up and tucked in a pocket of my backpack as an anchor through those early years.
The cottage was empty and quiet except the circling ache of the ceiling fan. Only blocks from the northern shore, the others had gone to lay blankets in the sand—even in a mid-spring chill, with sweaters on—to drink the cheap wine we stole from the corner store.
You told me you enjoyed Bukowski because he gave voice to a self that you had never known you had. A self you wanted to explore and better understand. You—with your suburban, two-car garage upbringing—had never smoked a cigarette until we met.
In the million hours since that hour that we sat and took turns yelling out lines of “Bluebird” to get a better feel for the words as they took shape in our mouths, there have been more cigarettes.
There have been more drugs that left our outlines in sweat stains on the mattress. There have been more broken glasses, shards in-between our toes, and mistake tattoos penned in our skin. There have been more falling-outs and car crashes and fathers with voiced, finger shaking disapprovals. There have been more curses and hospital visits and apology letters turned to kindling or tucked in drawers to be left behind.