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Withered
The day you spent lunch talking
to a girl with golden hair,
your eyes sparkled like crystals
of snow being warmed by the sun,
and your lips were pulled upwards.
You gazed at her curves the way a pianist
placed their fingertips on the black
and white keys; you couldn’t wait
to make music out of her, to rewrite
the symphony we once carefully composed.
I sat at the other end of the table,
hiding behind a copy of Eleanor and Park
and munching on kettle corn, thinking
of the days when my muddy, brown
hair used to coil around your fingers
and when your shoulders would shelter
my head; I’d close my eyes for hours
in the comfort of your arms wrapped
around my waist, knowing that you
wouldn’t let anything pry us apart.
Then, amid your conversation with her,
your eyes met mine, and the sparkle
vanished. My voice was wrung
of its melody, and my lungs wrinkled;
everything inside of me shattered.
Claw marks seared my heart tissue,
tearing it in half as violet bruises
scarred the ventricles. A cold breeze
sliced through me as you walked
next to her, your fingertips anticipating
the velvet texture of her hands and the
way her heart was carved like glass,
thrumming against her chest; I felt
like dust tossing in the wind,
withering away with your last steps.
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