The Motel Nymph's Lament

Hazy motel lights like low moons,
a feral peacock’s call,
a neon sign blinked VACANCY in a shade of red
that reminded me of the kind of lipstick that bleeds
when you curse.
The ice machine coughed like the woman in furs,
chain-smoking beside it,
who’s seen too much.
The walls were thin enough to let in
someone else’s heartbreak
and thick enough to keep my thoughts echoing.
Took two Tylenol, didn’t even think,
didn’t take time to feel, either.
The sheets were scratchy,
I tucked myself in like an apology.
Drank from a glass I didn’t wash, forgot to rinse first.
Called no one.
Gideon’s Version had someone else's underlines,
It made me feel less like the first to wander here.
The pages were open to Psalm 88,
which is just another way to say it was too late.
I wrote a poem on the back of a dollar-store receipt with eyeliner.
It almost looked like forgiveness.
(It wasn’t.)
I thought maybe if I slept here,
if I let the TV static whisper me to sleep
with low murmurs drifting from the corridors,
and if I prayed hard enough
to the light above the headboard…
I thought maybe I’d wake up
with new skin.
But in the morning,
the same birds were screaming.
That midsummer haze was burning.
I thought the motel was suspended time.
It was just letting me rot in peace.
I thought coming-of would linger in the anonymity,
the in-between,
Something or other,
the ice machine hum
In the bleach and the dust and the slow ceiling fan.
But I only found silence that looked like grace
and a routine that still held someone else’s shape.
But healing wasn’t here
(God knows I tried.)
Just my name on a bill
and a prayer that disappeared.
And no one gets better where nobody’s been.
That I might forget how long I’d been there.
I thought healing would come like a hymn from the air.
But healing wasn’t here,
That was just the peacocks calling from the hydrangea trees,
the hum of the summer air.
I always say I’ll remember the names
of the places I sleep in.
(I never do.)
They bleed together like mascara in hot rain.
Like old dreams you wake from, crying,
but can’t explain.
Like a saint no one prayed to, misunderstood.
I sleep in rooms that forget me
as soon as I close the door.
Time doesn’t pass in here.
It just drips
like the shower head
three floors up.
I don’t know who I was
in Room 216
or maybe it was 312
either way,
she’s gone.
She always is.
About the Creator
venusianjade
scientist, dreamer, lover, cryptid, mythmaker.



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