How wonderful it is to wake up in this winter rental with a sinus infection and have no one to bring me a bowl of soup and leave to meet with what surely is a published poet with tanned, smooth legs and a mouth that wraps around a penis like a rosebud. You don’t know how good it is to get out of bed and go down to the bay down Beachdale Road and count all the dead horseshoe crabs, see how barnacles suck on the carcasses and how the seashells stick to the carapaces as if by some calcic coincidence. If you were here, like you wanted to be when you wanted me always, I’d tell you about how the blood from the horseshoe crab is used for science, but the new, implausible you is back in the city, bartending, fucking around, making a woman straight out of Titian or Klimt or Modigliani the drink you named after me back when having a Coke with you was worth all the after hours. Maybe I’m not giving you enough credit. Though let’s be honest, you’re still probably maxed out and wasted. No, you might be explaining to that woman how the New York constitutional convention will benefit the working class and how Citibikes are a victory for socialism. But you’re probably not deserving of the credit, and you’re really just reciting Cummings to her, or whatever else will get her into bed. So yes, it is great to get out of my own bed now and not have my hair smell like your armpit and probably someone else’s, and not shower before showering together, and not question scarfing down the third quesadilla or having that third glass of whiskey, and not have you tell me to take it easy while you take it from someone else, and not be late for work because spoons are more emotionally lucrative, and not feel blanketed by the uncertainty of your warmth. Here is to never having you look me squarely in the eye again before telling me I am unstable before storming out before I’m done throwing your shoes in the garbage. God, yes, it’s nice to get out of bed, and not trip over your bike, and smoke as much as I want, and give my neighbor an eyeful of breast between the billowing drapes.
Issue
13