I told the stars to shut up. They weren’t witnesses. They were worse. They kept spelling your name, blinking slow, like pity, glinting gallant- like that ever saved anyone.
I walked past the summer we called ours like I wasn’t still stalking it. Like I didn’t prowl on purpose, like I didn’t rehearse your alibi, like I didn’t pray (for prey.)
I was fine with the trees, the oil stains, the way the sun pretended nothing happened. I could go days without hearing an ice cream truck, or seeing a sun-burnt stranger and thinking: maybe the universe rerouted you into someone I could almost survive.
You once said I was dangerous. And by once I mean I wrote it down and heard it forever. It’s in my lymph nodes, in the poems you pretend not to read. It’s in the version of me you kept almost loving but never quite chose.
You called us perilous. Or maybe I did. It’s hard to tell, since I’ve been writing you with your mouth shut for months.
I keep checking the margins for your voice. All I got were the noises people make when they’re trying not to drown, but pretending to wave.
Why is your name still more siren than sentence? Still more blood than bruise? I made your absence a body I slept beside, because I kept waking up guilty.
I never served, but I wrote the ending. Put my hand on a Bible, bit my tongue so hard the truth still tastes like you. Wore borrowed pearls, and swore to God I never loved you more than the day you didn’t show up.
I would’ve done time for you. I would’ve confessed to a crime that didn’t exist just to hold your hand once on the courthouse steps.
You said I was dangerous. You were right. But not in the way you thought. I told the whole truth- just not out loud.
You didn’t get convicted. But I still can’t go back to that summer without thinking the tan lines were warning signs, without getting subpoenaed by the sky.
Some nights, your name still tries to get in like a burglar. I play dead, tell the stars to shut up. But they unlock the window anyway. They spell you out in light like they want me to remember how it felt to be the crime scene.
his is what happens when the girl you almost loved becomes the crime scene. Grief, silence, myth, and borrowed pearls.