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vak Oct 2017
"I hate roadtrips."
"Yer gunna love 'em when I'm gone."

All they ever had in front of them was road. They faced an endless stretch of asphalt and rolling hills that trundled lazily beside them like tired giants with aching feet, and they stared the setting sun right in the eyes. It was like looking into the barrel of a gun, and when the trigger got pulled, they both were bathed in murky night with nothing to guide them but headlights and starlights. Keegan Mac Namara was a road that Molly was willing to walk.

Their journey across the verdant farmlands and everlasting clusters of villages falling into decay was only five hours in, and they had three more to go. Molly knew that when they stepped out of the car again, they wouldn't talk, and they'd just smile and laugh and cry without a spoken word. Two of the saddest free spirits without moral compasses to keep them on track. Before Molly left, it was always like that, and that was the best part about it.
She had met him in a pub after Ronan's funeral, and for the six months after, they were inseparable.

Keegan Samuel Mac Namara was the summer in the winter of Molly's life, the breeze to clear the smoke left behind Finnian Aherne, the anchor which kept her grounds from shaking with the tremors and aftershocks of a toddler-sized earthquake and even after he died she could still feel the thrum of her heart in her chest with the thought of him, of them, of what they were, and what they could have been, but never became.

He taught her how to love roadtrips, he taught her to be free, and he taught her to love.
He taught her how to shoot a gun, he taught her to sing, and he taught her to love.
He taught her how to smile, he taught her to laugh, and he taught her to love.
He taught her how to love.

They never got married and they never had children and they were never official; he never gave her something to remember him by: only memories of long nights spent together in the back of their van making up stupid songs or the feeling of laughing so hard that she cried and her cheeks rushed red for ten minutes afterward or driving so long that they forgot where they were going and where they had come from.

When he died, there was no reason to make up stupid songs, no reason to laugh until her stomach hurt and she had a headache, and the ten thousand roads that they traveled together were just lines that kept them from growing too attached; even if those ten thousand winding roads failed at that.

He made her lose her way, and she never wanted to be found. He let her find out who she was by keeping the tempest at bay..

When he died, the storm was all around her.

Their love was a roadtrip away from the sorrows that everybody faced. She was just lucky enough to be asked along the ride..

"I still hate roadtrips, Kee." She can hear him answer, in his voice so low..

"Then I ain't gone."
vak Apr 2015
Suddenly, you realize you hate
the idea of his hands
on your body.

For him to be at a point where the tips
of his calloused fingers can graze the pinnacles
of your spine and
settle upon your flaws,
weigh down on each freckle
and scar
on your flesh and become far heavier
than that feeling of dreadful nervousness that bubbles up
inside you when you're around
him.

He’s astute and adroit,
in order
halcyon.

The worst thing you can do
is fall in love with a boy
who loves books because

he will open you up,
like his favorite novel,
brush the dust from your cover,
read your story from start
to finish.

And if he doesn’t like books, then
he loves poetry,
and you’ll be a poem that
breathes.

If he doesn’t love poetry, then
he loves music,
and you’ll be a song that trickles
against his eardrums in a bittersweet
symphony of every
drop
of sadness
you've ever felt.

Like rain, he'll drench your pages
Leave you damaged
stained

But you will love it
You will love it.
vak Apr 2015
i think when you start loving someone, you never really stop.

things will happen and the world will rip you apart until you can’t recognize the broken shards of the person you once shared everything with. they almost become a stranger. and it hurts.

you’ll find pieces of them in the eyes of the barista at your local coffee shop.

and you’ll find pieces of them tangled up in the sheets of your bed.

in your heart— little bits and pieces of them— stapled to the ***** like a draft for a storybook being sent off to a publisher.

your story, the story you wrote with them. t

he one you’ll get published and put it in a nice leather sleeve— set it on the bookshelf by your bed to remember them by.

guests will ask you what that book is about, and you’ll just smile, shrug, and say,

“Nothing.”
vak Mar 2015
twinkling lights;

like fissures in heaven's marble floor,

leak scents of loneliness and gasoline.

peripheral vision scans passing windows and,

through the glass,

a table for one on valentine's

is displaying warm lights and

perfectly staged scenes of love,

contrasting the cold tint of early day.

a face as pale as the skies

searches for recognizable features

in dark spaces.

as her breath fades,

swallowed by the the smoke from a glowing cigar,

groans of protesting cars and white noise chatter

drown her out and

*life goes on

— The End —