In the gentle epilogue of summer, you and I laid together on the uncut grass of a field by a demolished lot where a house once was. Somewhere, where the wrist bones of maple leaves had begun to weaken, and the grand pianos played out to the applause of bee-wings. Somewhere, where the curves of our feet found each other often and my fingers orbited locks of raven-feather hair like the moon so faithful it spins itself to dust simply to be in the presence of the earth. I told you that it was not important how long this moment lasted, only that it came to pass at all.
You wept.
A bad feeling crept.
Then–
as best as I remember this is how it felt:
1. Like I was a star exiled from its own constellation.
2. Like there was a flash flood on the insides of my skin, tearing the suburb of my body to pieces.
This is how it felt to learn, that this would be the very last summer you spent with me. See, sickness rarely afflicts those done living. It seems God is an apple-picker who only picks the ripened.
And so with fury on my tongue I waved my fists like great flags of war at the heavens above and banished the faith out of my bones.
These were the growing pains of the 5 stages of grief.
How you offered to carry me when each step forward felt like fiery coals, and how I would walk no more because I could not get my head around the thinking that your wildfire soul could ever be extinguished. This is how it felt to have my heart removed and a harmonica emplaced, tuned to the key of a goodbye-song that goes on for an age. And I had begun to miss you even before your lungs shutdown like a carousal at a carnival, and the evening they did, a dead space was left in me many times greater than all of the black-spots on the outskirts of the galaxy.
If I am to be truthful I haven’t been doing all too well lately, and I still sit out on that same field almost daily, beginning and ending each day alone and unsure, because when God took you away, he salted the earth of my heart– now nothing grows here, most especially love.