The sky cannot decide
shine?
and neither can I. Rain
Rest or rise?
We settle on both.
I wear sunglasses and a raincoat,
and trod across soggy, squelching grass
my hair slowly soaking
with every raindrop racing past.
A block away, my arms are around your waist,
whispering sweet nothings, like rain on a tin roof;
and in my head there’s a foggy thought
that there was something I needed to do.
I patter through puddles
in the dusky dawn light
and dance around the corpses
the sunbeams won’t be able to revive.
In my mind’s eye
I laze like a goddess in our bed;
you annotate another article
I annotate your hips instead.
The pavement is a graveyard
I know would make you cry and so
I pick up a bloated form-still writhing-
and place it where the rain can’t go.
At home, still buried in your neck,
I don’t feel the slime.
And that class I was supposed to be at
has entirely slipped my mind.
I saved a worm.
I put on the kettle.
The rain pelts sideways but the sun is still blinding.
Wonderful, absolutely wonderful. I adore this. Thank you for writing this lovely poem.
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