December 9, 2025

Girl Crushed – 1985

Photo by İpek Bayrak on Pexels.com

In the office kitchen, all lashes and cheekbones, gift-wrapped cozy in your cashmere sweater, peeling an orange like a surgeon, sectioning each sliver, the way you segment our time, a juicy burst here and there, little pink hearts dotting your calendar.

Sprinting through sheets of icy rain, your tiny shriek, shaking out your umbrella, my knee against yours under the cafe table, fingers laced until you shake them apart to flag the waiter.

In my cubicle, polishing your nails while I type your stack of invoices, daydreaming of the night we shimmied off our prairie dresses, vamped around clubs in black Spandex, gyrating to Like a Virgin, licking the margarita salt off your lip, pretending not to see you tuck your phone number into his jeans.

At your bridal shower, passing out deviled eggs while you flaunt his grandmother’s engagement ring, gush about the multi-tiered cake, the honeymoon in St. John.

Outside the limousine, you press his ex-girlfriend’s earring into my palm, found yesterday under his bed, beside his hunting rifle, the exact model owned by the man you still call daddy, despite his drunken visits to your princess bedroom so many years ago.

At the church, catching you wince as the old man steers you down the aisle. Stare down at his steel-pointed cowboy boots—forgive you everything.

About the Author

Phyllis RittnerPhyllis Rittner  writes poetry, flash fiction, and creative non-fiction from her home in Watertown, MA. Her work can be found in Fictive Dream, Gyroscope Review, Emerge Literary Journal, Portrait of New England, Wrong Turn Lit (Best Microfiction nominee), and others. She can be reached on Facebook.

Related Flash
computer graphics wallpaper

Honest

By Amy Marques

“The last time she lied was a minute ago. She hasn’t told the truth in years. Her tongue wraps itself around assurances of happiness with no repentances, she is independent, able, fine, fine, fine.”
yellow plane flying over a forest fire

Who By Fire

By Laila Amado

“In this story, we don’t die by fire. We don’t wake in the middle of the night to the screeching of the warning sirens on the phones under our pillows.”

people sitting on bench at a bus stop

A List of the Reasons Women Feel Shame

By Sage Tyrtle

“My whole big self stumbles into a woman in a baseball hat who mutters fat bitch and I open my mouth to say I’m pregnant, as if she’s right to say it.”

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This