I'll Show You the World
He said, I'll show you the world,
and Gina—still soft with the faith
that good hearts recognize good hearts
mistook a wolf
for a man carrying flowers.
Anthony knew every beautiful sentence
that sickness could wear.
He stitched himself from borrowed sorrows,
made every old lover a villain,
every scar a medal,
every lie sound like survival.
She believed him.
She believed tears meant truth,
that broken men only needed love,
that promises were maps,
not traps.
So they married
before the echo of warning
could catch its own breath.
He gave her rings,
stories,
and ghosts with different names.
Lola became the monster.
Laundry became betrayal.
Cold takeout became proof.
Children became witnesses
in a courtroom built from his delusions,
where Anthony was always innocent
and someone else carried the blame.
Then came the Chevy Blazer
iron crashing through the fragile theater,
truth arriving without knocking,
headlights cutting straight through
his careful performance.
Still he called.
Still his voice wrapped itself
around her hope
like ivy around a gravestone.
Still she believed
the next apology
would be the honest one.
So they crossed an ocean together,
newly married,
chasing the paradise
he'd painted in impossible colors.
Hawaii waited,
green and breathtaking,
while beneath every postcard sunset
his darkness unpacked itself
one lie,
one wound,
one cruelty at a time.
He had promised her the world.
He never mentioned
he meant
the one he had already
set on fire.
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