But what erases also preserves: a slick, cool honesty between ribs and recklessness. Some tendernesses are too fragile for skin. Some truths need a barrier to be spoken at all.
So you roll it on — not because you don't want to feel her, but because you want to feel her tomorrow, and the day after, and because the only way to hold fire is to name it first as flame.
Gomu o tsukete — put on the thing that lets you leave without residue. Put on the thing that lets her let you in without a scar.
She said, gomu o tsukete to — not as a command, but as a hinge. A pause between wanting and warning.
When you put it on, you agree to a kind of forgetting: that your fingers might have traced her spine without a membrane; that your mouth might have known the syllable of her pulse.
Rubber stretches. It remembers nothing. No heat, no salt, no name. It is a second skin that learns nothing of the body it covers — a boundary that pretends to be a bridge.