The Bay by Tessa Sagner
- Eidolon Magazine
- 3 days ago
- 1 min read
Which I used to assume was warm even this far up along the coast because I thought all beaches were hot; don’t you know that the world keeps existing when I stop visiting in the summer
You do too, outgrowth of a segment
like a centipede leg (one of hundreds but not thousands)
rooted in places you can never rip off except in shaggy chunks
But object permanence fails me; I forget you when a trinket falls out of a shoelace
The third girl to drink up native strands of fog in gulps with us on park benches is now out of your life entirely
severed with a slice of baby bangs and
dropped off the face of the earth the way people do sometimes at sensitive ages where the veil is thin
But even then it was already rrcooling, condensing, hiding your eyes behind smudgy glasses and drying out your skins
So blonde and stringy, freckled in anticipation of the sun we split and not designed for the hills and skeptic spells of your homeland cast on to everybody who set foot on the rock
Without an escape route what to do? but climb into the raincoat-boat and dissolve into bitterly departed pieces
you scatter in droplets on windshields and phone screens