Severance
The world seems solid enough.
Teacups shatter
bones break,
and the girl who just jumped from her
tenth story window begs the Hilling Avenue
concrete to offer a split second
miracle before she--
It seems solid enough, the world.
But under the tunnels that run to Columbus Circle
gray slate and mantles shift,
so that we're always moving up and down,
and there are always spaces in between.
She says, "If you jump at just the right moment, you'll fall
through the gaps in it all and end up
on the other side."
We all seem connected enough.
A baby cries in the North Side of town,
while an East End mother feels in
in her stomach.
And the girl you love more than anything
in this world calls you just as you're thinking
about how she bites her lower lip after she kisses you
goodbye.
She says, "I just called to say good-bye."
We're connect enough, it seems.
Tiny gossamer chain-links extending from our ears
and stretching over topography. From a distance
it looks like cracks in white porcelain.
She says, "I will always be with you. We are the thing that stars
are made of, you and I."
But tonight you shake at the lonely end
of a telephone wire,
of a cell phone signal,
of a soup can attached to string.
Hello?
Hello?
Pleading with the empty window on the tenth story
and waiting for illumination
a space,
an opening,
a pinhole,
anything to let the light through.
You and her
were what lovers were made of.
She was the electricity and you were
the contact wire.
Together you were strung out Christmas bulbs,
blink
blink
blinking conversations, holding one another
and burning through dawn.
She says, "Let's hold on to all of this."
But tonight you grasp at the air and come up
empty. You wonder if you'll forget her
voice or the way that she let her hand lay,
heavy on your chest, while she dreamed
of stars, porcelain teacups, babies wailing,
and trains
rushing in and out of Columbus Circle.
You wonder if you've finally had enough.
You wonder if there are chasms too deep
for light to kiss.
You think that maybe this Hades exists in you and you
think of all the shifting and the spaces and how the ground
is crumbling beneath your shoes.
You wonder if you're enough.
And you hope
that when the shoe finally drops,
that when the cards finally fall,
that when the elevator cable finally breaks
in a way you always knew it would break,
you hope--
that you can jump at just the right moment
to be in the air at impact.