Member-only story
Don’t Tell
Poetry
little girl blue, that’s what they call you
down on the corner by the drug store,
probably because the neon sign
bathes you in azure and white,
like you’re a mermaid in relief,
when really you’re just a girl
who knows too much —
probably much more
than you should
the boys who come out of the store,
carrying their candy cigarettes
and their packs of chewing gum,
eye you like you’re meat
in a butcher’s shop,
all the ready
for a taste
but you laugh at them because
they think they’re hot stuff,
all cool with their bicycles
and the sporty cars borrowed
from their parents’ garages —
they have no idea
what love means,
these naïve kids
you act as if you know yourself
(you’ve read things, seen things