Let’s go back to 1. To start again, to meet you, to seventeen, to yellow and hugs, to hammers and strings. Nobody knew me then, and I ****** up told them the true story. Let’s go back, and I’ll tell you a different one. It started out a prepschool fantasy. I had a Great Perhaps, and you (were there, probably) And then I ****** up, my friend. I’d like to revert to 1: a second round I’m ready, now. Hello, nice to meet you Would you like to have a drink with me? I will say yes. I will be thin again for you And when you touch my arm I will not shrink from you. Let us. Let me, at least Revert to 1 and promise (I do—to do better now).
On money-soaked leather, we’ll make angels no I’m sorry—we’ll make amends I will talk breathy and flutter my eyelashes; I will be Daisy Buchanan a rosewater anachronism that needs no cigarettes and no pretense, only Attention (I stood at, when you said goodbye) There will be no end. There was no end. Not a goodbye. On rust-red rooftops we will soliloquize (about what?) (it doesn’t matter) We will throw lit matches and watch how fire makes its mark And we will separately wonder where it goes and—are you listening?—we will watch the sunrise and I will tell my daughter about that day when she is older. A prepschool fantasy. We will drink to the word “contraband” and it will be 1966—the rich kids’ 1966, the whitewashed one we pretend we are ashamed of. I will be Daisy Buchanan, and thin again for you. Let’s go back to 1. I would love to try again, and better now.