I don’t want him back. I want him wrecked. I want him looking up my name like a prayer he’s not allowed to say out loud.
I want him mouthing my name in traffic like it’s a hymn and he’s the wrong kind of sinner. Like if he says it, I’ll appear— but not to stay.
I want him walking past a girl wearing my perfume and feeling sick. Like car crash sick. Like pulled-over-on-the-freeway-thinking-of-me sick.
I want him to swear he saw me in the corner of his eye three states away. I want him to feel watched every time he lies about me. I want him to dream in second person and wake up shaking.
I want him tracing my texts with his thumb like they’re Braille, trying to remember how it felt to touch someone who meant it.
Let him write poems and choke on every line. Let him dream in my syntax and wake up stuttering. (Let every stanza end where we did.)
I want him to tell people he’s over it— and mean it. Until he isn’t. Until a Tuesday breaks him in half.
I want him to pause mid-bite at a restaurant we never made it to. I want the taste of me to ruin his appetite.
I want him to see me tagged in a photo and spiral. Not because I look beautiful— (which, I do)— but because I look fine. Like I forgave him. Like I made it out. Like the part of me that waited so quietly it started to look like faith— then moved out and left no forwarding address.
I want him wrecked not because he left, but because he almost didn’t. Because he said forever like he meant it, and ran like he didn’t.
Because I waited. Because I believed. Because I held the door open so long my arms shook. And all he had to do was walk through.