I traced our last conversation inside my lip with my tongue, until it burned like citrus.
My teeth still taste like that night— miso soup, metallic coffee, a dare— and the word “almost” said until it split.
I don’t start the fires— I just know how to fan them so the smoke spells mine, so the ashes spell proof.
“You’re welcome for the mirror,” I said, then, “You flinched first,” like scripture I was tired of reciting.
He called me a problem and then prayed for something exciting. Well, God listens. And she’s been on my side lately. (And sometimes inside me. And sometimes wearing red.)
You say I write like it’s a weapon. But you brought a sword to my poem. You heard me speak—and called it war.
I’m not the plot twist. I’m the motif. I’m the whisper that keeps showing up even when you don’t name it. Especially when you don’t name it.
You wanted a girl who could break without getting any on your shoes. Who called it miscommunication when it was a massacre. I called it Thursday.
I made you feel. You made it a crime scene. Now every sentence tastes like sirens. But sure—blame me for the blood in your mouth when you kissed me wrong.
So yeah— maybe I do make things worse. But worse is where the story gets good. Where you start reading slower. Where your hands start shaking.
It’s not that I ruin things. I just ask questions that don’t look good in daylight.
It’s not that I mean to wreck things. I just don’t know how to leave a room without checking every exit twice.
And labeling each one ‘almost.’
You ever love someone so hard you forget to be charming? Me neither.
He thought he was the mystery. I’m the red string and the corkboard and the girl in the basement with the map of everything that never happened.
You didn’t fall for me. You fell through me. That’s not my fault. It’s gravity. Or girlhood. Or God, laughing behind her hand.
Say it again. Slower. This time, with your hands in your pockets.