his nose, a lump,
illuminated in the moonlight.
a face carved from rock,
rests next to mine.
we lay in the wet grass,
the cold night sky our blanket,
the holes in its stitching
growing in the passing hour,
i shiver.
uncomfortable,
clothed in nothing,
but naivety and wonder.
I let him touch me.
his calloused hand,
a sea urchin,
crawling across my bare skin,
leaving goosebumps
that he cannot see through the dark.
i let him touch me,
knowing my power rests in the space
between his unbidden fingers,
and my pale brest.
“Can we kiss?”
“No”
so we kiss.
so the sea urchin finds its way
to my lips,
to my mouth.
i swallow down a throat,
no longer mine.
the sea urchin curls up
in my stomach,
the only warm place it can find
on a cold night.
sea urchins taste slimy and sour,
long after you wash your mouth out.
i swallow
again and again,
wash
again and again,
because sea urchins
go down easier than loneliness.
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