I’m sorry. It’s such a frightening thing. While I’m covered in airborne dust and dirt, somewhere out of the desert you dream of losing a girl you never had.
Under a straw sunhat, I argue with a chubby bartender who insists my “over twenty-one” wristband is not enough to justify selling an overpriced beer to my baby face. I run through crowds, back
to my campsite, cursing her under my breath for delaying my drunken dance. But somewhere else— out of the heat and the food trucks and the live music and the showers in the backs of trucks—you know.
And you prepare yourself for the path I am down, where I miss Frank Turner for the sake of stumbling, and later my legs will tremble under a tent that may or may not be my own.