It was a week before the holiday.
When I left, I lit a candle.
We drank wine and whiskey.
I could see his heartbeat,
feel her voice,
taste our liquor.
We said that we are
a beautiful existence.
A woman waits on the wall
reaching out for something,
the lines of her fingers stark
against the black fog that surrounds her.
We tasted like wine and whiskey.
Beneath soft blankets
we shared a pillow,
pressed close enough that
three days later his cologne
still lingered on my shirt.
I held my heart in my collarbone,
my body thudding with every beat.
All I heard was silence,
the fire gone out of my fingers
although his still burned.
We put a lot of power in firsts.
This one didn’t have to mean anything,
but that doesn’t mean it meant nothing.
The way his shirt stretched
across his shoulders,
over my skin,
his hands in my hair.
When I leave, the woman on the wall
beckons me to stay.
I go.
Maybe I’ll find what she’s looking for.
When I returned home,
the candle still flickered.
I wanted to tell him I'm not sorry,
but those words could ignite.
So I walked out,
listened to him lock the door behind me.
My flame burned out with the candle—
whether or not I did the smothering,
it was always going to suffocate.
I should have known better
than to let it burn so long.
Maybe the woman on the wall
was never looking for anything.
Maybe she isn’t reaching,
but letting go.
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