Old love letters paper the walls of my study. Faded and peeling, a few fall into the shadows while most remain, stubborn, insistent, unyielding and unapologetic.
Oh, how the ink has begun to bleed! To tattoo the dull, white paint in glimpses between the letters, as if I can hear their words humming in a melody of minor chords.
I've stopped checking the mailbox, full and lonely, we are enemies.
Bookshelves surround me as well, keepers of cluttered wisdom, tomes of goodbyes, adieus, and one or two apologies.
The stale air holds a minor chord-- the fermata of my early twenties extends in a one significant pause:
You tell me, We are not our history. And then light the single match illuminating certain, brown eyes and too much ruined papers.
Flames singe and curl the wallpaper The fire sings over the sounds of my past.
We are alive in the crucible, flames caressing my memories now only in the fireplace you have found in the corner.
Silent warmth and bare walls, We sit down to write a new book, bound in autumn leaves and cold rain, and in a new handwriting, You begin: *We are alive in the crucible.