never cruel enough

I don’t want it to pass; I want to wrap you up in it, a cord of need that thrums when touched. I should be able to see it in your eyes, an iris of desire; taste it on your skin.

Because upfront or behind, a hand around the throat or buried in hair is better than any leash.

I can be cruel, if you see cruelty in being kept at a precipice without knowing just far you have to fall. I can be cruel, if you see cruelty in crawling to me, eyes raised to meet my own, until you are close enough to kiss my palms.

I can be cruel.

But never without purpose.

(Scarlet Letters has been updated.)

savage but not yet sacred

I crave the sound of whimpering, of sharp gasps and well-used flesh.

I want to leave welts. Bruised wrists. Rope burns.

The civility, so carefully crafted, is paper thin. I can see the puncture marks where teeth have already tasted the warm air just on the other side.

I want you bent over my desk, hands bound behind you, and fucked hard enough that your feet have to scrabble for purchase as I take you.

just but not fair

My writing is half-formed, which makes excellent poetry but terrible sentiment.

Take the following:

“I want more words, stitched bright white, the interrupted thought on blue midnight.”

Elegance where I want unbalanced devotion.

I’ve taken to reading books of poetry, sitting in my large leather chair, the tiny lamp on the bookcase next to me snapped on by pressing in on a small black line. I take them in one or two at a time, re-reading them until I think I can be honest enough about them to say they’ve been read. I should be comforted by their trust, settled by their placement.

Instead, I am provoked.

I find myself answering them in missives. Scratched, typed, or scrawled, I write promissory notes of future intent.

Fuck foreshadowing, fuck Babe Ruth and his called shots, fuck the lies I tell myself about tomorrow’s hungers.

I want it now.