like I knew he was coming back, and I
was right. When he turned around and honked his horn I was busy hiding his
sandals, washing the dishes he had left behind to hide all traces of him,
elbows deep in soap suds and sadness.i braced myself and headed to the
driveway, wrapping myself around my jutted elbows, dripping, knitted. He
pretended like he had made a mistake and I pretended like I didn’t want to
follow him. It would have been so easy to jump into his car- I had already
packed my bags that afternoon hoping he would want me to join- but I saw the way
his eyes turned down and I saw- how unlike him- how his cigarette had been
smoked down to the quick, he still held on to it- ashes falling and he still
held on to it, it looked hot and too close to his touch but he still held on to
it, and it was time to let it go. So I jammed my toes into those old clogs we
shared.
I held my chin high but this was only to keep the salted
tears from being caught in the corners of my lips I tried to visualize the red
stone on the floor underneath my yoga mat, tried to call its structure into
form, borrow its consistency to keep me upright and sturdy as I made my way to
the front door. But all I could find in the spaces between my mind was the last
cigarette I saw him smoke, how it stirred listlessly in his hand much past its
prime, how it begged to be released. I saw it dropping sweet and slow and
painful all at once, imagined its impact upon reaching the rocks below and the
sickening peace that would come at its demise.
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