--I WISH THINGS WERE DIFFERENT
...Well, tomorrow night I'll be reading and doing my first ever book signing. I'm a little nervous. It'll be the first time I've ever read in front of non-writer friends. Maybe I've said this already. I'm not sure. Anyway, I haven't figured out what all I'll read. There's time for that all day tomorrow. I know, though I know i won't be reading this:
Sphinx
She
said she’d be there for me. She said
forever. Then she amended the
declaration; “I’ll be around until the first of us dies, or at least until one
of us flunks out of high school.” She
suspected I’d be fleeing the scene before her, mainly because I’d become
careless and had stopped showing up for most of my classes.
I
could hardly be blamed. I was beside
myself, smitten with love for Dawnielle.
My life—the bland summation of fifteen whole years—now belonged to the
trout fishing ballerina with bowl cut hair and stone cutter’s eyes.
I
said, “Name something impossible and I’ll do it for you.”
“Buy
me the moon.”
“Ah,
that’s too easy,” I said.
The
next morning I watched Dawnielle leave her house for the bus. She stopped immediately, struck by a series
of chalk moons I’d painted in succession across the sidewalk. From a hiding spot, I watched Dawnielle break
open a grin, and it felt as if I was the books she hugged against her chest, the
light glittering in her eyes.
Another
time I said, “If you knew how much I loved you, you might be frightened.”
“I
don’t scare easily.”
“I
love you so much that sometimes it’s hard to breathe when you’re not around.”
“Just
practice holding your breath. It’ll come
in handy for swim meets.”
“I
love you more than my parents.”
“I
would hope so, your parents suck!”
“I
love you more than God.”
“Now
we’re talking.”
I
was afraid to kiss her. I did not want
to soil or stain or defile her in anyway. To me, Dawnielle was the perfect
creation; the sphinx before Napoleon’s cannon blast, before erosion and sun
damage. I could never stop gazing at
her. She said, “Most boys go blind doing
that other thing.” And here she made an up-and-down motion with her hand. “But you’ll be the first to go blind from
staring at me.”
“Do
you think you’ll ever fall in love with me?” I asked.
“I’m
working on it.”
We
traded dirty jokes our brothers had told us.
I bought her perfume that smelled like pomegranate because it was her
favorite fruit. I wrote her poetry that
made her laugh and cry. She said,
“You’re a really good person.”
When
she went missing, I thought she was pulling a prank. Dawnielle liked surprises and sneaking up on
me, shouting “Boo!” so I’d jump and start to get angry. “Go ahead,” she’d say, egging me on, “Yell at
me. Get really pissed.” But I coudn't ever get mad at her, just as I
still can’t get her out of my head to this day.
She
never ages. She’ll always be fifteen,
perfect and pure, a little aloof and unattainable.
I
picture her in slow motion, skipping or twirling inside a shower of
leaves. I imagine her leaning in for our
first kiss. I recall the scent of her
breath.
My
wife says I drift a lot. “Everyone
daydreams occasionally,” she says, “but you, you get lost in other galaxies.”
And
she’s right, of course. We’ve been
married thirty years and, like any wife, she knows me better than almost
anyone.
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