Leaving
There were fingerprints on the walls and ceiling
From when we spent the day eating
Green and purple Sour-Babies
And jumping on the old bed.
I remember the springs were gone in the center, we kept falling,
So you held my hands and we jumped on opposite corners.
The house reminded me of a childhood I didn’t have.
It had orange creamsicle colored walls
And rough half-melted linoleum in front of the stove
That would catch your socks on pancake Saturday’s.
I remember dropping the hot cookie sheet there before Christmas,
And watching it turn the floor crackling brown.
I would rather be in that house than in New York,
And I don’t think you understood that.
But I never listened to myself around you,
It was easier to take your advice.
I remember lying on the bed, our only piece of furniture left,
And I quoted books I’d found under my faded winter sweaters
“Two is the beginning of the end.”
In our new apartment, with the off-white walls and cold metal sinks,
I remember waiting for you to tell me you loved me.
I waited too long.
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