There is an uncomfortable ledge on the tip of your tongue. It is the place where your flimsy thoughts uneasily sway, and in these debating moments of loosely hanging on, you decide to spit or swallow. For you, it is the worst place for words to stoop, and sometimes your tongue just flicks them out like cigarette buds and all you can do is look down the ledge in disbelief. I catch the words at the bottom, salvaging rusted-penny-like sentences. If I pocket enough, I know I will be able to give them worth. I will surely turn uncertain stammers into something much more amiable and toss myself up the sill; our anxious balconies colliding and combining. I absorb the last fretful words, out of your mouth, and sip the apology slowly off your lips.