She wore a windbreaker as red as her parents voting habits, and smoked American Spirits as rough as the next-door skateboarder's hands.
At 18, she was bored by teen-aged touch, and looked towards the thirty-five year-old avant-garde painter, who meandered in his sun room, like a soul pretending to be lost.
At 20, her parents told her to go to college, to go to 'some place other than here'. So, she went and had skinny, Greek fingers with chipped nail-polish, dip down and inside of her, without judgement, without thought, and, with this touch, she felt free.
At 24, she was an undergrad with an apartment and a guy named 'Blake', and Blake said Brown and she said State. And when Blake left, she felt complete despite losing something meaningful.
And when her story started to go on forever, her body spread across the pavement like seeded jam on burnt toast, scraped thin, without image and without future, lost inside crevices and cracks, a memory or thought, wandering nothingness.