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peach jam
His words were like grandma’s jam -
Sweet, orange peach simmering in golden sunlight
Echoes of an endless time that had yet to come
On certain mornings, while the robin trilled a rose melody,
She would dip her shiny butter knife into the ripe jam
And let the preserved fruit coat her heart with its fragrance
With her pinky held high, she would spread the warm jam
Onto a slice of brown pumpernickel bread
Releasing her breath only after she had smeared all of it on
She would lick the knife to taste all of the potent jam
So as not to waste any, right? Or to fully immerse herself in him,
She claimed it was irresistible to swirl her tongue in the fruity jam
As it danced against the metallic silver of her butter knife
But she shouldn’t be so greedy, mama said
Spread it out, let it melt, savor the taste forever
On those days, it was sweet and it sank comfortably into the dough
When she ate it, her eyes watered and she would devour it whole
But there were days less sweet -
If she opened the glass jar and the sweet aroma did not envelope her,
She knew it was because his appetite for her had gone sour,
And yet she still dipped her shiny butter knife into the sea of jam
With her pinky held limp she let it fall messily,
She let juice splash everywhere, all over her hair and her vanilla sweater
And she let it stain her white countertops with splatters of desperation
The knife, coated in ripe jam, would still scoop and smear
But the once shiny, reflective utensil had borne its wear
Scraping the pumpernickel toast as she layered it in glutinous jam
She fell into its self-destructively sweet aroma
Even though its taste, heart-wrenchingly bitter, held her back
No longer would she fervently lick the jam off her butter knife
Still, she let her hopeful naivety reign
As she pressed the knife and its helpless lover against her cheek
Hoping the peach would melt into her skin, so that
At least if she couldn’t have him
She could still imagine that she did.
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