There is a way the shirt unravels,
a little stray thread,
that you tuck,
into the fine, sturdy body of the hem,
with a promise,
to snip at a later time.
And forgotten,
between the entwined legs in the mid-mornings,
and soft cradling hands
that cup
cheeks and chins and bright eyes,
left tumbling like dizzy lovers
in the post-coital wash, the machine
catches it.
What a tender tug.
At first, a spinning,
a back and forth unstitching,
then, oh.
The strap has fallen,
the shirt has split,
and all the pieces fall, wet and tearing.
No comments:
Post a Comment