
I hope when I’m gone
I don’t rattle chains or doors,
I hope I learn the language of dust
and quiet corners.
Let me haunt a bookstore—
the kind that smells like paper and time,
where spines curve like tired shoulders
and stories wait like unsent letters.
I’ll slip between the aisles at midnight,
a hush in the poetry section,
a breath of cold where the endings live,
where I never had enough time.
I’ll read the books I meant to read-
the ones I promised myself,
the ones that came out after I died
and never knew I was waiting.
No clocks, no closing time,
just ink and ghosts of sentences,
just me learning how every story ends
without worrying about mine.
And if a living hand reaches for the wrong book,
I’ll tip the right one to the floor,
like fate pretending it was an accident,
like love, still meddling.
If I have to linger,
let it be somewhere full of hope—
where even the dead believe
there’s always another chapter.
About the Creator
Brie Boleyn
I write about love like I’ve never been hurt—and heartbreak like I’ll never love again. Poems for the romantics, the wrecked, and everyone rereading old messages.



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