I love my baby — I love her like a lamp burns late,
but she don’t light for me.
We sit and stare for hours; the radio plays low,
her coffee cools in the saucer, untouched.
We walk miles past houses with their porch lights on,
her hand in mine — a cool, polite weight.
She speaks of summers that held her like a map;
her eyes keep folding toward yesterday.
My heart makes maps of tomorrow — roads she won’t walk.
We sleep under the same thin blanket,
and I count the cold that settles by my shoulder.
I love my baby — the line goes into the night,
but she don’t love me back; the lamp keeps burning blue.
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