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Our Weather
The clouds crumble like unfinished pottery
The kind of grey that sticks between the creases in our palms.
The kind of grey that twirls like bicycle wheels.
Maybe the raindrops are your wires
and the wind your gears,
and maybe I will balance on the handlebars with you
until we are ready to ride.
Our building stands stoic from the outside,
as it watches me close the gate with my sleeve.
You love the way the bricks are unpainted,
natural and rough like the world.
I tell you I mostly agree.
Fog greets us like a distant relative,
rubbing cold, textured cheeks on our foreheads
kissing our hands until dew snags our fingernails.
You reach to hug me –
but I’m busy with the worms
and I don’t notice.
Members of the mist are late to their gathering,
trapping us in impatient tension.
Our voices sit awkwardly in the clenched clouds
waiting to be released.
I reach to hug you –
but you’re busy with the phone
and you don’t notice.
Suddenly drizzle is tangled in your stormy curls,
the curls you spun as a gift for my genetics.
The downpour invites your vocal chords to leak affection
and you accept.
We trickle down the soaked sidewalk squares
Crafting our own thunder with our lowest octave,
Throats rumbling, laughter like lightning.
My hair drips blue on the nose you gave me,
water bruising our pupils
as we hold eye contact with the breeze.
We are the handlebars, and the wheels
propelled by the tongue of the storm.
Our bare arms mimic the glowing moon
as we extend them so wide our tendons ache
and we welcome every droplet.
You offer your small grin, the corners of your mouth
pulled by the strings of my happiness.
I wrap the scarf of dimming sky around my torso,
and I reach to hug you.
You aren’t busy. Neither am I.
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Hazel is a sophomore in creative writing at Ruth Asawa School of the Arts in San Francisco. They have work published in several literary publications, including Synchronized Chaos, Teen Ink, The Weight Journal, and Parallax Journal, and have performed their poetry at the Youth Art Summit in San Francisco and 826 Valencia. When Hazel is not writing, they can be spotted cuddling their three cats, holding their python, feeding their tarantula, or rescuing insects from being squashed.