Outgrowing My Mentor
By Max Mundan
I sat at your feet;
only metaphorically.
As I remember it,
I sat on the couch,
as you, with your strangely lilting voice,
held my hand and walked me through;
patiently; meticulously;
the pitiless steps of the reverent ritual.
You were so gentle
as you wrapped the sash around my bicep;
laughed at the expression on my face
pinched the crook of my arm
to bruise and raise a vein.
And as you slid the needle in and we watched the blood
cloud the water inside,
you apologized, profusely,
for the infinitesimal pinprick that precedes the rapture.
I swore to you,
in that ghastly and gorgeous moment,
this is how it would always be;
that you would be there, by my side, every time,
to guide me down the path of night.
but like the other oaths that passed between us,
this too, was a hopeful lie.
The day came, as it was
ever
destined to do,
that you were gone;
selling yourself
in the fashion required
for you to get by;
and the pull of oblivion
proved stronger, by far,
than either love or trust or art,
so I took the syringe and taught myself not to need
you anymore.