--SOMETIMES GOODBYE IS A SECOND CHANCE
Facsimile
She
worries about becoming an imitation of herself, of having conjured up a
physical facsimile of someone she’s not.
Sometimes her secrets gurgle and brew so loudly that she’s afraid she’ll
be found out. The two abortions. Making out
with a girl one summer at camp. An uncle’s
hairy hand under her shirt. The year she
compulsively shoplifted mascara from Rite Aid.
The
cat curls around her ankles like a scarf as she plucks an eyebrow in the bathroom
mirror. Last night she made love to
George Clooney although it was her husband inside her. Now he’s suited and ready for work but gives
her a kiss on the head where her wet hair is parted. He says, “Love you.” He says, “I’ll be late tonight. Don’t Wait Up.”
After
he’s left, she gets the fireplace poker and smashes the bathroom mirror. Shards the size of carrots lie angled on the tiled
counter, dissecting her reflection, reproducing a million frauds. She picks up a jagged piece and holds it
against the inside of one wrist. She
remembers a girl in high school, Lisa, who did the very same thing. She remembers being flabbergasted that anyone
would want to kill themselves
Now
she lets her robe drop to the floor and climbs inside the tub. She runs the water hot, wanting to burn, to
hurt, but not enough to die, wanting instead a way out of this hoax of her.
She
drops the chunk of glass on the floor, thinking; I can do this, somehow I can,
I can be a real person. The faucet
floods out water. The water smokes
steam. Pieces of the broken mirror lie
idle without speaking. She closes her
eyes and starts at the beginning. “Who
am I?” she asks.
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