when in spring
Giulia Gudor
there’s a special kind of
intimacy in you knowing
nothing about me: like how
i take my coffee black and
breathe in nature’s scent.
all which are characteristics of you.
coffee: black. no cream, no sugar,
nothing. you told me it’s what you
preferred and i found it nauseating
at first, but i grew to love it once you
were gone, and stand at the ocean’s
feet feeling closer to what could’ve been.
i’ve never known such cruelty until i was
forced to my knees before satan’s throne
and recognized the one upon it as
you. i saw an emptiness in your eyes. your soul
was ice and froze the
tar that leaked from your tongue.
bones decorated the pedestal on
which you were raised. i saw
some as my own: my sacrifices and
shattered illusions. the rest were
from your other victims.
i praise you in knowing how to
ruin one’s mind. how to shift
reality against her and force her to
believe you’re her savior.
it’s a pity to think that you’re
nothing but a boy
untouched by his father’s
heart. i feel as if it’s why you
came to me months later: so
i could give the same cruelty
you’ve been given in a desperate attempt
to convince yourself my love was still there.
it’s the only way you knew how to
love and be loved, and i feel
you still —lingering and waiting—
behind sealed silence,
screaming at me to
let you in. to give a sliver of
myself so you can nurture the broken
parts of your soul.