Still
All I’ve got left in this empty house
is lukewarm Grey Goose—
and small talk—that prattles about
in my brain—for hours
—everything I said,
everything I did,
—a rapid fire
of crossed wires and neurons.
My brain’s a wormhole of its own conception
I feel numb. But I was the one—
who looked back.
I don’t care.
Anymore.
I can still hear the flame
brazened body language—
translated into verbs and nouns, now—
as I brood and smoke what’s left
and forgotten, too—
of your cheap menthols.
My spine resembled hers, you said
and it disgusted you. We lay there all night, breathing slow breaths of fire
to opposite sides of the room.
Silent.
I don’t care.
Anymore.
Maybe it’s staring craters into fine lines
—as the firing squad descends
and a smile as the first shot rings out—
death’s last call.
Finally.
—Because, what’s anything, if memories are, and will only ever be—
lost projections, set on a timer.
I don’t care.
Anymore.
I’m a derelict kite lost in the flutter,
just restlessly—in search
of some unknown hand
to grab me.
I don’t care,
anymore. But,
I think what burns
halos into my corneas as I refuse to unshut,
is that just maybe:
I do care.
Too much, intense. Too—
real. Too obviously caring.
Still as I sit,
abridged.