Queen of the Gas Station: A Eulogy
Louisa always liked the firemen
Who burned the dim woods,
Who smoked out their truth.
And what remained took to a shadow,
Cast by their unholy light.
When they don’t burn our skin
“They keep us warm”
She laughs
Laughed
I wish it still echoed.
Louisa once told me
That she had a dream
That her hair was long again,
And she was a girl again,
Still sweet.
That we didn’t know our own cruelty,
And with her carmine lips she smiled.
She told me that those eyes didn’t belong to her (anymore)
But still,
They looked back.
Louisa and I sit by the gas station,
Sat
Miles away,
It looks the same as this one,
All emptiness looks the same.
We would sit on the hot concrete in our cheap skirts,
And pull at the weeds,
Satiating the need to kill
To control
That all we have,
The ground is hard here too,
But the neon’s far too bright,
But if she closes her eyes,
It should be alright
Louisa lived elsewhere
But I think she died here,
I can’t change that,
And the clouds are dark
And so it falls
I lift my eyes
To still look up,
Hope
Looking for a fabled arc
That Louisa would have loved
But it’s just sky
All above.