Tender, the Bruise
— Emily Harman
Undress by the dusty window
that autumn,
run fingertips gentle over
the ridges of your ribcage,
the pale branches
of collarbone and wrist, as your reflection
smudges and blurs, the shadow of touch
still heavy,
a dark fruit
pooling deep beneath your skin
where it ripens a strangled blue,
hungry for light
like the underside of a cloud that purples
the sky. Remember how it feels at first,
before it softens,
swollen and warm. Press your thumb
into the sharp hip of memory, just
the hollow center,
to wince at the rounded ache—
how it blooms.
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