by
Elegy for the Last Time I Saw Your Hangnails
I said a living girl is a dead girl. I said my guardian
angel is racking up debts that I can’t pay. Winter is a
debt collector. A living girl is a bled girl is a girl milked
of her innocence. Hey you, I’m looking for directions
to a place where I won’t get homesick. Where the ground
doesn’t smell like a lottery ticket. Where the sky’s gradient
doesn’t shimmer like a blue raspberry gas station slushie.
The last time I asked that, we ran off west through Nebraska.
Then we changed our minds and drove down to Texas. Wind
turbines gaged the earth like a punk’s septum. The flatter
the earth, the bigger the sky. The bigger the sky, the louder
the wailing. I’m gonna live there one day. Go ahead, call me
crazy. Call me cowpunk. It’s true: We don’t get to choose
where we’re from, but we get to choose who we relate to. When
the doctors told me my eating disorder was killing me, I said
instead, I was dying of desire. I still desire a wet ring of my
strawberry lip gloss around your mouth and the curls pulled
out of your hair by a cotton pillowcase. I still desire testimony
carved into screen doors. I clung to you like the spit-soaked white
bread from my grandpa’s fried peanut-butter banana sandwiches
clung to the roof of my mouth, like “I’ll Never Let You Go
(Little Darlin’)” clung to its chords. Give me one more time to
prove I’m okay with not doing it right. Give me one more time to
prove I can not be good and still be yours. I rehearse requiems
in the knotted knolls of the night. The moon chaps my mouth.
