Rolling with my thunderstorms, violet shifts to black and you run ashore.
Capsized outside a theatre, I wrench you out from the starfish glob of mess I made, blow the grit off your forehead, scrabble for a candle we can re-light together.
One time, mud snatched at your ankles. You screamed but I was seeing drains and reflections twisted in puddles like fuzzy lines on the old TV. A migraine came; I threw it up into the sink and slept.
Lost count of the times you've tossed me out in the snow, garbage among banana skins, frozen earlobes, but who chucks a duvet over my frost-flecked skin but you, with a clumsy smile and mascara raining down cheeks. Every time.
Tonight I find you in the evening fog after searching every subway station my legs would allow. My shins cry for rest. The busker plays Bob Dylan out of tune but canβt blame a guy for trying.
You discover my eyes, put your face to my coat, mumble words like you have a mouthful of ice.
Lookinβ for a friend? The 11.04 towards Borough Hall. We get on, I catch your breath, count the hundreds and thousands of steps to home.
Written: September 2014. Explanation: A poem written in my own time, and part of my ongoing city series. This piece regards a couple who are struggling to make their relationship work. The guy cannot please the girl, while the girl worries about her behaviour towards him. Side-note: coincidence there is a subway station in NYC called 'Chambers Street', when my name is Chambers. 'Lookin' for a friend' is from the song 'Subterranean Homesick Blues', by Dylan.