VOWS
by Stephanie Bruzon
for B
this is the part where the mystique dries up
and turns to mold.
/
this is the part where furniture imprints
on naked skin,
and shoes are put to dry
in the sun.
/
where it matters not
that something is happy,
where it matters only
that it is alive.
/
this is the nonsensical
chapter,
the
“I want to write happier”
the skin
to the tumor
to the body
that is blue.
/
you dig my illness
a grave to lie in;
I keep its death
close to my chest:
a vow of gratefulness
to you.
/
a single vow of
I do,
I do give it
now
instead of take it.
/
and then I lie about it
when it becomes exposed again
and let my bare legs
swing back and forth
over it,
/
lest I take myself
into that winter
I know that I will
never come back from.
/
and you might say something like
“But you love Billie Holiday!”
and I’ll say
that jazz makes me
wish I could scream louder than I do.
/
something about the color blue again
something like
I’m almost almost
almost
blue.
/
and you,
you might say
“this is the only life in which you have
come out of the other end alive,
alive
and on fire”
/
and I might say
this is the only life,
there is no other.
then make a vow to the end,
/
a vow that won’t end.
/
and you might say
beautiful things,
and I might say ugly ones,
/
and we might live
to say them both
/
again
and again.
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