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the push of a button.
Long fingers fasten every last button
 on her blouse, covering up her skin, soft like milk.
 He is still watching her; she wishes he would stir
 or move or do something so that by chance she might catch
 him looking.  She doesn’t like it so blatant.  She waves a tiny goodbye and slips
 out the door, and as she passes the doorman, her cheeks burn.  
 
 Outside on the city sidewalk, she can feel the sunlight burning,
 so she stops to unbutton
 her cardigan to cool off.  She slips
 the barista a tip and turns to add milk
 to her earl grey.  Hundreds of people scamper down the concrete stairs to the train, she among them, listening for its rumble, its deep underground stir.
 
 As she sits, wobbling a little with the train, she waits for the stir
 of her heart, trying to feel that familiar burn
 of exhilaration that used to catch
 her off-guard every time she left him.  Lights flash, urging her to hit the receive button
 on her phone.  It is her manager, telling her to milk
 the new client company for all it is worth.  As she nods in assent to the eyeless plastic, she self-consciously tugs over her knees her satin slip.
 
 The last in the surge, she barely manages to slip
 between the closing metal doors.  A familiar face temporarily stirs
 her imagination, and she holds his gaze, longing to milk
 the moment as she has done so often.  They hold until her eyes burn, 
 and she breaks and turns as a button
 of a tear slides down her face.  She doesn’t stop to catch
 
 it.  A rainstorm catches
 her once she is aboveground. The water slips
 through cracks and down drains; it falls in puddles, making buttons
 and ripples on the surface, stirring
 up tiny storms.  Kohl runs into her eyes; they burn
 until she mops them with her towel and green tea, milk
 
 for her spicy itch.  Sitting on the fire escape, her eyes milk
 on the page with the glaze that is becoming increasingly familiar.  Why has it become so hard to catch
 her heart, catch her mind, make her burn
 again?  Anything to slip
 past this dull sleep; anything to stir.
 The past has almost been sealed by a solitary row of buttons.  
 
 She takes her milk to slip to sleep
 Catch some dreams, life will stir
 Burn her soul, then turn it off with the push of a button.
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