For seven months I drank my tea at the window and allowed the sun to cast its rays over my resolution. I gazed at the space between but never directly into my neighbours house for I knew the indifference that awaited me in her window of enmity. During the seventh month my love swelled and pooled at my fingertips, restless with those un-penned words of indignation, And so I gazed into her window. Bleeding from my freshest wound, just rage unfurled into bitter poems, reruns of us, of when you offered the belly of my dignity to feed your enemies, revealed a vengeance owed to me, not of retribution but of justice. During the eighth month I wrestled love and grief, rage and memory, to save you, to save you from the recklessness my pain threatened to uncage. I allowed the waves of your betrayal to break over me and pull me back into the sea of childlike grace within myself. I did not emerge cleansed, pure, or resolved. Victorious over my animal lust for vengeance, yet unsatiated in surrendering my desire to deliver you to the same gallows where you made a pariah of me. And conflicted with answerless questions. Is vengeance the natural harbinger of karma and therefore my gentleness; justice interrupted? Is my enduring love my weakness or my courage? .