Here I am, silent in the past, tasting the French nutcracker of my dreams. I hold my boyfriend's smile. It holds my thoughts. And my thoughts hold the embrace of a Prodigal Father.
But they can't shield me from the burnt cider that slapped my adolescence. I choke on the lie of life. Jilted and ashamed, I see it name its price: me.
My stilettos snapped. Their glitter, a ghost. My remains drip to a southern clot.
It's 3:00 and children come off the school bus with atrocious posture. They pick up their pace as the nervous sun bows its face to me. "Why me?" you ask.
"Why me?" I ask.
"Why me?" I ask.
FDR speaks on the scratchy radio again and again. He sees me in my misshapen corduroys and overgrown toenails, hopeless, and I realize that I'm the flaw, the lord of melancholy thoughts. Mother still listens to the radio so I ask her, "Why?"
She tells me, "There's a chance," and I feel the shame in doubt.