There's a stranger
in my house.
She takes a seat at an
invisible chair and
stares me down.
"You're lonely," she says,
twirling a piece of hair around her
hazy fingers.
Smoke clouds around her collarbone
and slips past me like
acceptance.
"How did you know?" I ask,
then shake my head.
It's obvious.
By the way I stare
for a second too long out
the windows, by the way
I leave little scraps
of paper strewn about
my bedroom- notes on my life, reminders,
a sentence or two that came to me
and seemed poetic.
She laughs, the stranger
in my house. She laughs
as if this is all a
great and fascinating joke.
"I'm here to stay," she says.
"I'd like the guest room
with an extra chair inside."
She twinkles, knowing that I'll do
anything for her, my lovely,
lonely self.
"I'm expecting a guest or two."
in my house.
She takes a seat at an
invisible chair and
stares me down.
"You're lonely," she says,
twirling a piece of hair around her
hazy fingers.
Smoke clouds around her collarbone
and slips past me like
acceptance.
"How did you know?" I ask,
then shake my head.
It's obvious.
By the way I stare
for a second too long out
the windows, by the way
I leave little scraps
of paper strewn about
my bedroom- notes on my life, reminders,
a sentence or two that came to me
and seemed poetic.
She laughs, the stranger
in my house. She laughs
as if this is all a
great and fascinating joke.
"I'm here to stay," she says.
"I'd like the guest room
with an extra chair inside."
She twinkles, knowing that I'll do
anything for her, my lovely,
lonely self.
"I'm expecting a guest or two."
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