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when i walk into the bathroom, with dawn breaking her fingers to squeeze her hands through the windows at the end of the hall, i am surprised to see a girl at the corner sink. i expected to be alone to wipe at my face, to press gentle fingers against the tender skin of my neck, to pull up my shirt and check the visibility of my ribs and the flutter of my heart, to stare at my eyes in the ****** mirror in the ****** lighting and calculate all the little changes that a boy’s hands can wreak on a body in under an hour. but she is there at the corner sink, scrubbing at her red and irritated cheeks like she is lady macbeth trying to erase the ghost of a touch that never left a physical mark. i have makeup and sweat sticking to my skin and knots in my hair desperate fingers left behind and i’m not sure my shirt is my shirt and i just want to be alone to examine the damages and count the casualties of a war whose victor i could not point to, and really, the only reason i walked into this bathroom was to figure out how to walk back out again, but i am not alone. if she looked up, if she caught my gaze in the bathroom mirror, she could see my hands shake. my first thought is that she has no reason to be here, taking off her face a handful of hours before she’ll put on a new one. but before i can hate too fiercely, i see my own eyes and wonder if maybe we made the same mistakes tonight. maybe she fell in love with her boy too and in doing so turned her body into a battlefield just to have a fighting chance to stay with him. maybe she hasn’t realized yet. maybe she will take her red face and slumped shoulders and shoulder past me and all my sins and silence and find all the pieces of herself strewn on the ground, collect them in cold arms and leave the room, close the door quietly, pause at the end of the hall to see dawn die for day, and think, “that girl’s hands were shaking,” and think, “that patch of sky looks exactly like his eyes,” and think, “oh—oh this was not supposed to happen. not like this, not ever like this.”
0
Nov 17, 2016
Nov 17, 2016 at 12:22 AM UTC
an hour after losing
when i walk into the bathroom, with dawn breaking her fingers to squeeze her hands through the windows at the end of the hall, i am surprised to see a girl at the corner sink. i expected to be alone to wipe at my face, to press gentle fingers against the tender skin of my neck, to pull up my shirt and check the visibility of my ribs and the flutter of my heart, to stare at my eyes in the ****** mirror in the ****** lighting and calculate all the little changes that a boy’s hands can wreak on a body in under an hour. but she is there at the corner sink, scrubbing at her red and irritated cheeks like she is lady macbeth trying to erase the ghost of a touch that never left a physical mark. i have makeup and sweat sticking to my skin and knots in my hair desperate fingers left behind and i’m not sure my shirt is my shirt and i just want to be alone to examine the damages and count the casualties of a war whose victor i could not point to, and really, the only reason i walked into this bathroom was to figure out how to walk back out again, but i am not alone. if she looked up, if she caught my gaze in the bathroom mirror, she could see my hands shake. my first thought is that she has no reason to be here, taking off her face a handful of hours before she’ll put on a new one. but before i can hate too fiercely, i see my own eyes and wonder if maybe we made the same mistakes tonight. maybe she fell in love with her boy too and in doing so turned her body into a battlefield just to have a fighting chance to stay with him. maybe she hasn’t realized yet. maybe she will take her red face and slumped shoulders and shoulder past me and all my sins and silence and find all the pieces of herself strewn on the ground, collect them in cold arms and leave the room, close the door quietly, pause at the end of the hall to see dawn die for day, and think, “that girl’s hands were shaking,” and think, “that patch of sky looks exactly like his eyes,” and think, “oh—oh this was not supposed to happen. not like this, not ever like this.”
kit-mattern
Written by
Nov 17, 2016
Nov 17, 2016 at 12:22 AM UTC
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