Northbound
I swallowed my pride,
remembered that Patroclus
didn't have to die and that
Enoch
left no bloody body to mourn.
I knew the tragedy
of mourning.
I woke up every morning
to the hollow sounds
of a heartbeat in
resuscitation.
I thought of all
my friends with parents
who loved them.
I wished them well.
I wished them hell.
I spent my last year
sucking hope dry,
pretending not to cry,
working towards absence.
I was raised by the night
and the eternal Georgia sun,
but not by you,
never by you.
I became so strong,
no bullet or body
could touch me.
The day I left,
I chained my tongue
to the back of my throat
and told you I loved you.
My backseat filled up
with all the thing I couldn't
let you keep.
I will become
a memory, erasable
with time,
silence,
with the steady transfer
of bitterness
from my poisoned veins
back into the source.