In a poem we are tipping horchata down a drain, holding hands,

laughing

and in love 

the way we were in life 

transcending the romantic or the familial 

to confuse every friend and parent,

the girl who hit on you in the vampire themed bar-cum-pizzeria 

and glanced at me nervously to see what I would say

 

in a poem we are eating pizza,

in a poem we are sucking blood 

through silly straws 

`

I killed you in poems once

and placed you on high up unobtainable shelves

 

and in another we are preserved on the bridge over Camden Lock 

where you licked ice cream and flicked hair out of your face 

so I could take the perfect picture 

you’re trapped in there too, of course, 

but it doesn’t convey the longing 

the soothing rush of slipping into something warm and comfortable 

knowing it would last forever 

not anticipating the tapas we would eat with lovers two years 

and 400 yards away 

that would be the crack, the fissure

the thing I would prod at tenderly with my tongue to make myself wince 

 

but in the poem we’re still there

it’s June, always 

the sun high and scorching

I’m in dungarees, you’re in that little black top with the sunglasses pulling at the v neck 

there’s a litany of other people frozen in the background 

and maybe in real life they all hate me too

but in the poem they are static and hazy 

the ice cream is almost gone 

but there’s enough for a few mouthfuls more 

and we are smiling

at each other

 

Chloe McIntosh (She/Her) is a poet living in Hertfordshire, UK. She has a BA in English Literature from the University of Exeter and was shortlisted for the Platypus Press Celestial Bodies Poetry Prize while studying there. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Briefly Write, Utopia Science Fiction, Lucent Dreaming’s For a Friend Anthology and elsewhere. She likes Scottish folklore and thinking about all the friends she no longer speaks to. You can find her on instagram at @chloemcintoshwriter