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I met him in the night.     A Gayborhood local      told me he was from Venezuela, but didn’t have to,            his accent, so beautiful with its deep grit and softness,                                twang and lisp.                                I already knew,           he didn’t have to tell me.              He bought me drinks, and watched                              me             and only me,                 as I bit from the fruit of his garden.                             He invited me to an afterparty,   I didn’t know    him, but we went     through alleys,          dampened by the heat of bodies       melding to the brick walls, glistening                             in the streetlights and nightlife. Unknown lips                           pressed and held, to stay,            not to                          part. It was         beautiful.                         Within the alley was         our destination: underground. It was                 a luscious venue, crowded, exuberant and whimsy.     Velvet covered the walls, and he brought me more drinks.                                       I finished them all.                                                                                     I remember locking lips with a stranger, and how          it hurt.                                        He was warm and sweaty, and          smelled of Burberry and whiskey,                                     his stubble left                my face burning.                             He grabbed my hand, and led me to                          the bathroom, then I woke up                              in his bed.                            I remembered                             his husband’s name, and that                                             he lived in Caracas, that                   we had *** and took                            a shower together, that                             his mother, dying from leukemia,                                                slept upstairs, unknowing.                                                                     I wept in a stranger’s arms,    cradled by their tiny physique.          I wept               for our beloveds.
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Oct 16, 2020
Oct 16, 2020 at 1:27 AM UTC
That Time I Cheated
I met him in the night.     A Gayborhood local      told me he was from Venezuela, but didn’t have to,            his accent, so beautiful with its deep grit and softness,                                twang and lisp.                                I already knew,           he didn’t have to tell me.              He bought me drinks, and watched                              me             and only me,                 as I bit from the fruit of his garden.                             He invited me to an afterparty,   I didn’t know    him, but we went     through alleys,          dampened by the heat of bodies       melding to the brick walls, glistening                             in the streetlights and nightlife. Unknown lips                           pressed and held, to stay,            not to                          part. It was         beautiful.                         Within the alley was         our destination: underground. It was                 a luscious venue, crowded, exuberant and whimsy.     Velvet covered the walls, and he brought me more drinks.                                       I finished them all.                                                                                     I remember locking lips with a stranger, and how          it hurt.                                        He was warm and sweaty, and          smelled of Burberry and whiskey,                                     his stubble left                my face burning.                             He grabbed my hand, and led me to                          the bathroom, then I woke up                              in his bed.                            I remembered                             his husband’s name, and that                                             he lived in Caracas, that                   we had *** and took                            a shower together, that                             his mother, dying from leukemia,                                                slept upstairs, unknowing.                                                                     I wept in a stranger’s arms,    cradled by their tiny physique.          I wept               for our beloveds.
**** In no way am I trying to romanticize adultery **** This is something that broke my relationship for a little while, everything is back together now.
jake-griffith
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Oct 16, 2020
Oct 16, 2020 at 1:27 AM UTC
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