Nathan Tompkins, April 2016

Breaking

 

That first night, I wanted to stretch

my lips across the table, draw circles

to dot its black varnished surface,

and press them into your smile,

feel your breath brush against my tongue.

 

That last night, you on your knees,

the feet of your palms cradling your eyes,

as the cries fell down your cheeks,

my shouts echoed in drywall corners

 

in sharp contrast to our pillow laughter

just a few nights before, your left breast

cushioned by my hand, as our sweat

slowly dried from our naked tired bodies,

 

I can still see you crying, kneeling

as I slammed the door behind me,

stalked with the dog leashed woven

between my finger joints, as I walked her

for a half mile, smoking cigarette after cigarette.

 

My anger friction burned your thighs,

but your lazy arrhythmic sighs

told me your heart wasn’t in it,

and, really, neither was mine.

 

I kept seeing your blond hair

pasted to your cheeks by tears

like drowned memories floating

at the bottom of a whiskey glass.

Nathan Tompkins is a writer living in Portland, Oregon, though North Idaho will always be his home.  His work has appeared in many publications including Fickle Muses, Yellow Chair Review, and Crab Fat Magazine.  He is the author of four chapbooks, the most recent of which are A Song of Chaos and Lullabies to a Whiskey Bottle.

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