I stick my fingers in my throat and throw up a basket of swallowed suns; under it, my tongue is parched and pinned in place like a dried house moth on an entomologist’s hand that nurses it back to life
and demands devotion in return, a poem in return.
But I have purged the feeling being out of me like a cold, cold man now averse to the ways of his younger lover who is alive for all of it — the lust and the starving kisses and the quiet deaths in the morning only to haunt at night.
I leave letters for my bitten nails without meaning a single word, and go to lie with the superficiality, the hypocrisy nesting under my tongue.
I have started writing poems again — see where they take me this time and find myself here, once more where a fool unpacks her baggage and out I come rolling like a dead body with a foaming mouth, a brown moth burning under the sun, a leech that scurries under salt and needles, slowly eroding like sanity.
She thinks, therefore, she is, they say, but at what cost? She looks on and pens this poem with a tiny smile on her lips.