Roark Drive, CA
Giulia Gudor
Although I’ve never walked the streets of Alameda Bay,
I know that blood-stained corner:
the one where dead roses lay.
We could hear something play:
It was the radio next door,
I got to, got to, gotta take it slow.
You told me Mexico was waiting
through the lyrics of the ‘93 B-side track
while your arm was on the upper bout
of your boat-worn childhood axe.
Two hundred seventy-nine days
since I saw the freckles in your blue eyes,
and only thirty-one have passed
since you reminded me of what lives on your mind.
In your bedside table I am still pursued:
the remnants of my scent upon
the billets-doux.
You played three songs, said:
“I made them about…
…I never truly stopped loving you.”
Your words dragged me back into reckoning,
to Pier Forty-One where you said:
“Do you really think if I told you what I did,
you’d trust me just like you did from the start?”
It’s where my love for you has died
although I’ve never walked the streets of Alameda Bay.
On the corner where Roark meets Midwickell Drive
is the blood-stained ground where my dead roses remain.