Thursday, August 20, 2015

POETIC JUSTICE

the first time we spoke I asked you to 
write me something beautiful.
do you remember that?
and you did, you did,
and it was so beautiful that it
brought tears to my eyes. And I 
went home and laid down and I cried,
you didn’t know that. Now, I hope, 
now maybe you do.

I probably took that for granted
and I'm sorry.

I was far away from you that night.
Too far. 
Opposite ends
of a stupid floating piece of land.
But I could still talk to you 
when I needed to,
because we have phones and emails 
and letters and
dumb shit like that.
Maybe I didn’t text you enough times, if I had,
maybe you’d still be here,
you know?
Maybe I could've stopped you
Maybe if I'd called you and
you had told me about the storm
I would've been able to tell you
to stay put and wait
until it passed. 

I’m sorry if I sound angry.
You know how in books and 
movies the bad
phone calls always come at night,
like, right in the middle of the night,
like, at three a.m.?
I thought that was just one of those
things that only happens in books and
movies, but it doesn’t. You must
know that now. 
You must know everything now,
wherever you are, 
maybe you know all the truths
that us stupid idiots back here
know nothing of. 
Three a.m. and I got a phone call
that split all the seams open. 
Everything just
collapsed.
Eighty five miles an hour on
an exit ramp, they said.
You lost control, they said,
and then I did too.
I'm sorry, somebody said. 
It sounded disconnected,
as if it wasn't actually 
coming from the
phone, as if somebody 
were actually
with me in my dark room, 
talking to me. I wanted it to be 
your voice so badly that 
for a while I believed it was. 
But it was me, I realized that. 
As soon as you were gone I 
started going crazy,
talking to myself. 

You know what's weird is that I didn't 
cry immediately that night.
I went to the bathroom 
and turned on the tub faucet and the 
sink faucet and I just 
tried to process it,
process the fact that I'd 
never see you smile again 
or hear you laugh or anything
like that.

"I'm not here.
This isn't happening."

Sweetheart, why were you driving so fast?
Sweetheart, why the hell did you do that?
If I had been there
I’d have told you to slow down,
not drive like a fucking idiot in the rain.
Why were you driving so fast?
Why were you driving so fucking fast?

Three a.m. and I haven’t gone back to
sleep since.
I can’t fall asleep. I find myself crying
at least five times a day now,
choking sobs that rack your entire
body. It’s hard for me to get in a car
because I just remember you sitting
in the passenger seat when you were here
and you’d drive with me 
and you were safe.
But now you've disappeared 
completely and I'm holding
one of your tee shirts in my
hands and it doesn't smell 
like you anymore but 
I feel like I can still 
touch you if I try hard enough,
like you're somehow 
trapped in the cotton fibers
and that this will somehow
make it better. 

At your funeral I said 
a few words. It’s not like
they meant anything. 
You couldn't hear me.
The casket was closed. They said 
it was because you were
thrown from your car. That’s all they told
me, but I overheard somebody whispering
about how your
skull was basically smashed to pieces.
I still think you’re beautiful.
Even with glass embedded in your skin,
blood drenching your pretty clothes,
I still think you’re beautiful.

But I feel bad. I should’ve
written you a eulogy
I should’ve eulogized you 
because all the white flowers
and all the weeping people in black 
didn't 
do you any of the poetic justice
you deserved,
but I just couldn’t find the words,
I can’t find the words 
without you here.
I can’t find any words anymore,
when people ask me how I’m doing 
or if I need
anything, I just smile and it feels wan
and I think I’m becoming a ghost.

Did you become a ghost?
Or did you go somewhere
beautiful? Tell me, please. 
I can't bear to think
that there are secrets between us
now, I want to know about 
this beautiful place you must be in.
I hope you're not sad,
wherever you are 
and I hope it's warm and 
pretty and you can smell flowers still. 
But come back, please, touch me
with your cold hands.

I know you were pretty mad
before you died. I had been distant,
literally, figuratively. I was busy, 
I wasn’t lying
but if I had known,
god, if I had known
shit, if I had only fucking known,
I would’ve dropped everything and
held you one last time, 
I wouldn’t let
you touch that steering wheel,
do anything stupid,
I'd take you in my arms and never
let go, tie you down 
to the bed if I had to just to 
keep you safe,
kiss you and hug you and tell
you I'd never let you get hurt,
that it'd be better this way,
trust me, I'd say,
I've seen the alternative.
I’d take you in my arms, 
darling, I’d
keep you close and warm in bed with me,
I wouldn’t let you go anywhere, 
you couldn’t
go anywhere.

You’re a fucking bitch 
for dying on me.
I’m trying to be angry so 
that it hurts less but it’s
taking a lot of work and 
I’m exhausted and like I said,
sleep brings no solace.
All I can think about is the 
last time I kissed you,
I keep going back 
to that moment,
I don’t remember where we
were but I think it was 
either your room or mine and
it was a while ago and it was brief but 
you loved me
and I loved you and 
I could taste it on your tongue.
Fuck you.
There’s nobody left for me to talk to.
So I’m coming to meet you, 
I’m coming to meet you
because the world is so fucking 
boring when
you don’t exist in it and
I tried to visit your grave but they
haven't been taking care of the grass
and apparently there's a famous poet
buried in the same cemetery 
and I thought about how unfair 
that is because you're probably in heaven
talking to him right now 
and he's probably writing you all these 
nice poems and you must be so happy
and all I have is a stone,
just a stone with some words written 
on it and it can’t speak to me
and tell me everything that 
I need to hear and
maybe it’s selfish but 
I’m coming to meet you,
I’m coming to meet you,
right now,
so please, please

let me-- 

2 comments:

  1. This poem is poetic justice enough! There's an extensive amount of poetry outside the graveyard though

    ReplyDelete