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20 April 2012

Dragonfly Wings


Vaguely she remembered his face.

His beautiful, chiseled face. His piercing eyes, twinkling like the stars. The smile-lines etched around his mouth. The shadow of a smile. It haunted her. He haunted her, and didn't he know it, the bastard. She stared at her spaghetti. It stared back at her. She twisted her fork around in it until there was enough of the raw-tasting noodles on the fork to make for a substantial bite. Then she brought it to her mouth and carefully enveloped the bunch of stringy noodles in her lipsticked lips, resting the fork back in the bowl.

She was a broken woman. He was an angry man. But it wasn't always like that, she told herself. She remembered the first time she noticed him. It wasn't the first time she met him, they were neighbors. But she never saw him before then, never really looked. It was in the supermarket, when she wore white clothes and lived in a run-down studio apartment, teaching yoga to a class of fourteen women and a cat. She was buying microwave popcorn, he was buying a blue-boxed bran-based cereal. She crashed into him, her long embroidered white skirt getting caught on his pointy black shoe, and they fell on to the shiny-plastic orange tiles in a pile. She laughed and apologized, and he watched her. They tried to get up together, and she hit her head on his elbow, and she fell to the floor again in a giggling heap, clutching her microwave popcorn to her chest. He held on to the rack on which there sat miles upon miles of super-soaking, rash-preventing, brightly colored diaper packets, and hauled himself up. He held out a hand, but noticed her holding on to her packets of popcorn, one in each hand (and one on the floor).

She felt a familiar tingle at the nape of her neck as she watched her spaghetti. He had leaned down, held her gently by the waist as if she were a were a fragile object, pristine but breakable, and picked her up. They didn't move for a while. She could feel his hands now, holding her gently, she could hear him breathing into her ear. Her hands shook as she pushed back her chair, her lower lip trembled as she put the half eaten spaghetti in the rusted sink. She tried to walk fast, move fast, think fast, and it frustrated her that she couldn't.

He was just a man. She had been with so many men. She had been with complete monsters, and they didn't scar her for life; she had been with angels, and she barely remembered them. But it was different with him. With him, it was meant to be. She felt it in her fingers when he held her hand. She felt it when she traced patterns (the leaf-like veins that you see on a dragonfly wing) on his untrimmed chest. She felt it in her lips when he kissed her. It was the kind of feeling that doesn't go away, the kind of throbbing inside you that floats along with you no matter where you try to go. She couldn't be without him, and he couldn't be without her, but it couldn't go on. They hurt each other. So he left, she reasoned. I know it was the right thing to do. I would have left sooner or later. This high-ceilinged apartment that was too big for one person, and too small for two.

It was a mature relationship.

Maybe those just aren't for me, she told the sink quietly. She eased herself down to the floor, and held her legs tightly to her chest, as if afraid they might try to escape. Maybe there's something wrong with me. Maybe I ask for intimacy but I can't really handle it. Maybe I was too immature for a relationship like that. But he was too. She remembered the forts they built out of pillows on the ridiculously large bed. How they walked next to the ocean and went into the water every single time they were there, no matter what clothes they were wearing, or what the weather was like, or where they had to go. She forced a smile out of herself remembering how they jigged in fancy restaurants and hid under the table if they encountered people they knew.

They were good together. Outside, in the real world, they needed each other to function. To eat with the right spoon and not make terrible a faux pas around his boss, he needed her. She couldn't cross a road. He couldn't buy condoms without going a delicate shade of pink and stuttering. She couldn't decide what cocktail to order in nightclubs, and she always hated whatever she chose. But when they were alone, they were quieter. They made more mistakes, and accepted them less. When they were alone, they cuddled, they kissed and they touched, they occupied little space together and told each other everything, everything that they could think of. They wiped each others' tears, and they made each other cry. He knew exactly where it hurt, and he drove the point home. She retaliated, silently but violently. She screamed. He muffled his own tears into a pillow. But he never lay a hand on her, never hurt her physically. She appreciated that. Still, she whispered into her knees. It had to end, she stressed. It couldn't possibly go on like that. It was killing me, she murmured, and her knees understood. They sympathized. She stood up, encouraged, and decided to wash her immaculately clean hands again.

Everything was slow. The water in the tap was slower than usual. The window behind the sink was grimy, and the single fly that rested on the ledge was slow. Too slow. Was it dead? She wondered if she should touch it. She decided against it, and put out a single finger, the nail bitten down brutally, to touch it. It buzzed with a start and fluttered around her head, confused. It upset her. I'm sorry, she said loudly to the fly. I'm sorry! She told it angrily, and walked out of the gloomy kitchen and dining area to her bedroom, a mere six steps away. She didn't bother to change out of her simple gray shirt, much too big for her now. She simply stepped out of the shabby pants she had been wearing for two days, and daintily stepped into her unmade bed. She stared at the beautiful painting of a dragonfly on the wall in front of her. She traced the intricate patterns she saw on the wings on her arm. It tickled her. She imagined drawing those patterns on his arm instead of her own. On his untrimmed chest. On his stubbly face. His regal neck. On his large feet. She loved him, but she had let him go. Honest to god, she had. As long as letting go could encompass dreaming of tracing dragonfly-wing tattoos on his awkwardly manly body.

She lay there, on the ridiculously large bed in the high-ceilinged apartment too big for a single person (but too small for two), and looked out of the grimy bedroom window. She looked for a long time. Eventually the stars came out, and one of them moved very fast. A shooting star! Her ends of her lipsticked lips curled up in the shadow of a smile. They had always wished on shooting stars. It was their thing. So she closed her eyes, and wished to herself that she could stop loving him, but wished to the star that he was thinking of her. She didn't want much, see.

Somewhere not too far away, a young man stopped his car on the side of a bustling, well-lit street. He had seen the shooting star too. He looked at the reddened skin on his wrist, gently touching a fairly recent tattoo, black upon his olive skin. A large dragonfly, with the most exquisite wings sat upon his hand. His cynical-looking eyes softened up for a minute. His trembling mouth curled up, a perfect match, the shadow of a smile that had been there often. He shut his eyes as the shooting star disappeared into the black folds of the night, and wished that she was thinking of him.

15 March 2012

Moths

Small lies said in big words,
With a little quiver, a little jerk.
You always seem to be looking down,
It's like you've lost your quirk.

A certain emptiness of the eyes,
A certain hunch in your pretty back.
A pause when there is none required,
You talk with a little too much tact.

What's wrong, old friend?
Why won't you say?
Do you tell anybody?
Do you ever pray?

Your hair is immaculate,

Your glasses are clean;
But behind them your eyes
Seem to have lost their sheen.

Was it something I did?

Did I say something wrong?
Are you going to turn your head
From me all evening long?

The moths flit towards the light,

But you seem to shy away from it.
I lean towards you and touch you,
You seem to have your teeth grit.

Where's the sunshine? Where, I say?

Where's the bubbly parts of you?
Why won't you let me help, honey?
Are you lost, or have you just grew?

I feel like a stranger next to a friend,

This doesn't feel right, this isn't right.
Why have you given up? I sigh and look up,
In the gloom, the moths seem unnaturally bright.