Sick4Sicktorrin a. greathouseI think my lover’s cane is sexy. The way they walklike a rainstorm stumbles slow across the landscape.How, with fingers laced together, our boots & canesclick in time—unsteady rhythm of a metronome’s limpwrist. All sway & swish, first person I ever saw walk witha lisp. Call this our love language of unspokens:We share so many symptoms, the first time we thoughtto hyphenate our names was, playfully, to christenourselves a new disorder. We trade tips on medication,on how to weather what prescriptions make you sickto [maybe] make you well. We make toasts withacetaminophen bought in bulk. Kiss in the airportterminal through surgical masks. Rub the knots fromeach others’ backs. We dangle FALL RISK braceletsfrom our walls & call it decoration. We visit anotherER & call it a date. When we are sick, again, for months—with a common illness that will not leave—it is notthe doctors who care for us. We make do ourselves.At night, long after the sky has darkened-in—somethinglike a three-day-bruise, littered with satellites I keepmistaking for stars—our bodies are fever-sweat stitched.A chimera. Shadow-puppet of our lust. Bones bowed intoa new beast [with two backs, six legs of metal & flesh &carbon fiber]. Beside my love, I find I can’t rememberany prayers so I whisper the names of our medicationslike the names of saints. Orange bottles scattered aroundthe mattress like unlit candles in the dark.