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I saw your canvas —
slashed with spit and colorless ache,
a mess of limbs and grief,
like a corpse that forgot how to rot.
Your art was bad.
Not in the way critics sip wine and nod —
but bad like mildew in the mouth,
like sex in a burning church.
And yet —
something in that ruin stirred me,
as if ugliness had teeth
and knew how to kiss.
I hated it.
The smeared eyes, the crooked mouths,
all moaning in paint like they knew
what I’d hide under my breath.
Your brush lied —
but it lied the way lovers do,
with trembling hands
and no apology.
I left the gallery hard
and haunted.