RUNAWAY
Gaia Rajan | Poetry
Four months until eighteen and no one to be
an orphan with. In a town named for its heat
I shivered on strangers’ couches, gave each
a different name. Couldn’t sleep until I saw them:
my dead friends sprawled on the coffee table
eating lavender ice cream by the pint.
I spent days charting the insides of my eyelids
like I was building a cartography, a star map
swirling outwards, lit by the flares
of exploding satellites. I didn’t go outside
in daylight, not even to clip my shirts
to dry in the sun. I was terrified
of being found. I don’t remember anything
from those months except
what other people captured
in pictures. I barely ate. When I dislocated
my shoulder I punched it back into place.
I was trying to be all I needed but my need
kept leaking out. For months it was sour rain
and sleet and I covered my teeth when I smiled.
Gaia Rajan is the author of the chapbooks Moth Funerals (Glass Poetry Press 2020) and Killing It (Black Lawrence Press 2022). Their work is published or forthcoming in Best New Poets 2022, the 2022 Best of the Net anthology, The Kenyon Review, Split Lip Magazine, and elsewhere. They live in Pittsburgh. You can find them at @gaiarajan on Twitter or Instagram.
"photo of ice cream" by Alexander Grey