6.26.2021

all they asked was that we let them take it

That summer they had cars, soft roofs crumpling 
over the back seats. Soft, too, the delicate fuzz 
on their upper lips and the napes of their necks, 
their uneven breath, their tongues tasting 
of toothpaste. We stole the liquor 
glowing in our parents’ cabinets, poured it 
over the cool cubes of ice with their hollows 
at each end, as though a thumb had pressed 
into them. The boys rose, dripping, from long 
blue pools, the water slick on their backs 
and bellies, a sugary glaze; they sat easily on high 
lifeguard chairs, eyes hidden by shades, 
or came up behind us to grab the fat we hated 
around our waists. For us it was the chaos 
of makeup on a bureau, the clothes we tried on 
and on, the bras they unhooked, pushed 
up, and when they moved their hard 
hidden cocks against us we were always 
princesses, our legs locked. By then we knew 
they would come, climb the tower, slay anything 
to get to us. We knew we had what they wanted: 
the breasts, the thighs, the damp hairs pressed flat 
under our panties. All they asked was that we let them 
take it. They would draw it out of us like 
sticky taffy, thinner and thinner until it snapped 
and they had it. And we would grow up 
with that lack, until we learned how to 
name it, how to look in their eyes and see nothing 
we had not given them; and we could still 
have it, we could reach right down into their 
bodies and steal it back. 
 

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