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NYC, graduation party, and a lone woman
She heaves a sigh
heavy with burden
and stained with marijuana
through her caked lips.
Her blue orbs
glitter underneath the chandelier;
they wander aimlessly through the
Dolce Gabbana bags and Gucci shoes
until they meet a dancing married couple.
The pale man naturally rests his
scrawny arms around
the black that drapes across
his wife’s generous waist. She
softens her gaze as she looks at him,
then softens them further as she
looks behind him -
at the two children
chasing each other through
the aisles of cheese and canopies,
releasing giggles of innocence
into the perfume tainted air.
When their irises meet
she musters a smile
that matches the happy couple’s.
She walks up
and says, you have a lovely family
How kind of you, where is yours?
Pause.
He’s not here today
As the party comes to a close
she stares longingly at her phone.
She scans the room cautiously
like a child stealing chocolates.
(for a second,
she drops her mask of a smile
and hastily wipes away her mascara coloured tears)
She (re)plasters a smile
so certain, so radiant, so perfect,
to make sure nobody even tries to see through it.
(but I already have)
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