I
I have bit
my tongue for too long
on this one.
I know that conscience
and the cold bite hard,
and rhyme is a twisting
tongue, is a sound leaf
caught between
two lines of teeth,
but this was torture.
II
Your cigarette
was a lovebite at the night's
cold neck
a brush of teeth along her black
back, a perfect kiss
in the cold air. So when
your lips brushed mine
I could not help but wonder
how,
between the rush
of teenage lust and tooth
and tongue, salivasap,
your lip
managed to trap
itself between my metal brace
and gum, biting
itself into submission
bleeding, suffering, then numb
as kisses became kickboxing
attempts
to escape, save face,
to free your tongue
like a bird of song
from its newfound cage:
my bruising, glinting brace.
This poem first appeared here: The Doodle Caboodle
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