You look like the life I wanted when I was pretending I wasn’t dying. She’s beautiful, obviously, and it’s not like I’m still trying—
I don’t miss you. I miss the girl I thought I’d get to be if you loved me right.
Do you ever ache so privately it feels impolite?
Because I do— in airports where I don’t arrive, in checkout lines I barely survive, on Wednesdays, laced with something sour, in stairwells meant for girls to cower, in dresses hung with rosary thread, worn to forgive what wasn’t said.
I am so well-behaved now. I nod. I smile. I bite down. I curtsy in crisis. I don’t make a scene. I bleach my longing till it gleams.
I’m not still hurt, I’m just rewired. I’m not that mad, I’m just so tired. I’ve kissed the quiet on both cheeks— but I riot in my lucid weeks.
I’ve made peace with playing dead, but some nights I come back red— in dreams that loop, in memory's choir, where the girl kept smiling while walking through fire.
You look like the life I lied about when I swore I didn’t mind. You should hear what I don’t say about you. It rhymes sometimes.