Still a Girl
by Lacie Semenovich
Serendipity of a sober night.
Serendipity of a glance across
a crowded dance floor, cliché,
I know, but true. I never believed
in love at first sight, but I still
remember your face, your
radiance, your smile as everyone
else melted into watercolors
around us, as we melted into
one another and I gave you
my real phone number.
Serendipity that you
remembered it. Serendipity of youth
that an hour is not too far to drive
each night for love.
Each day is a falling in love
when you sweat over dinner,
half-naked and red in a small
kitchen. Each day is falling
when you graze the inside
of my arm with your fingertips,
when you miss my cheek and kiss
my neck. Each day I fall
when you accept my dirty dishes
in the sink, my papers and books
stacked in corners and on tables,
my half-finished scarves, necklaces,
and paintings throughout the house.
Each day I fall into your eyes
to see the boy still there looking
back across a crowded life
looking only at me like I am
still a girl, the only one in the world.
* * * * *
Lacie Semenovich is a poet
and fiction writer living in Cleveland, Ohio. Her work has appeared
in B O D Y, Sheila-Na-Gig online, Qwerty, Chiron
Review, and The Best Small Fictions 2020. She is the
author of a chapbook, Legacies (Finishing Line Press).
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