I think about your old haircut and I miss muddy torn up shoes; scuffed canvas, stained laces. The tote-bag with a badge patchwork forgotten in your house, now an identically rigid, faux-leather handbag. Homogeneous.
Your eyes narrow when I laugh too hard, at something we used to like. You wince and turn away, behind your freshly highlighted hair. You cut off the last of the colour you'd begged for. You tell me you never cared for the things we used to love, so I shut my mouth and grapple with your change.
I wrote you a letter, handwritten and hand folded, in tea-stained paper and ****** red ink, my heart displayed for you. You pinned it up against your mirror. Sun bleached and binned. The text message you returned to me deleted itself last year.
I think about the rips in your tights and the dirt under your fingernails and search; but find manicured perfection masking any remains. I paint my nails and mourn the friendship we had, while you sit down and smile beside me each morning. You've polished your gemstones into mirrors.
Why are you so desperate to **** the girls we used to be?