she wrote words in between the cracks of sidewalks, so people wouldn't step on them
she scribbled in notebooks and left them at bus stations, where strangers took them home
she wrote her words in aquafresh on the bathroom mirror, and the next person would have the arduous task of cleaning her mind off and flushing it
she wrote on the stalks of wheat, which baked into bread fed rich and poor and stealing orphans who became trancelike
she wrote in red sharpie ink across the train platform and up the handrails and across the 90's patterned seats
she wrote pieces on the graffiti boards in skate-parks because they were covered by *** leaves and ying-yang signs that are anything but balanced, smiley faces more crooked than the person who painted it
she scribed phrases into candy given to children, sitting in stomachs and spit on the ground
she wrote everywhere so someone might remember her, and they didn't
they remember words across their cheeks, maybe a glimpse of beauty in the twirling joy of a child in the rain
they do not remember a girl with cropped hair and eyes that pierce, they do not remember a writer, only a