If nothing more than November ends tonight I'm
not sure we'll be alive in the morning. Every last trace of tenderness
was lost in this week's morbid silence, ten words or less between us in
seven days. He doesn't sleep, at least not when I'm watching.
Everywhere
around me is Christmas and lights and crowds of people, I try to absorb
whatever's left of warmth inside Lafayette on Haussmann and the chaos.
It doesn't work, he calls me but hangs up before I get the chance to
answer, his quiet breaths still just a fading memory.
Three hours
to December and if nothing changes we might still wake up tomorrow. I
never meant to hurt him, it just happened along the way like so many of
the things I learned not to regret. My fragile heart is almost empty
now, it's an overdose and a painless way of slowly dying before the
winter and the snow.
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Monday, November 24, 2014
Turn around and say good morning to the night
This is what he says:
"I met someone at a restaurant in Nice, or was it Antibes? Never mind. It was spring, I saw him sitting alone at another table and somehow we started talking. He was from California but felt he needed to get away as often as possible, just like us. I told him about you. No, I told him about a girl that was coming to spend the summer with me. I told him she was from New York and had a heart as black as midnight.
I described little things I loved about her, how she bites her nails when she's nervous and only wears matching light colored underwear regardless of the season. I told him about the Rose Bar at Gramercy and her morbid obsession with butterflies.
He listened without asking questions, somehow I got the feeling he knew this restless girl I was talking about. I got the feeling he had met you, that he had spent a great deal of his life close to you and knew precisely what I was going to say next. That he had seen that exact same depth in your eyes, those eyes I get so hopelessly lost in whenever I try to understand what you're daydreaming of.
We spoke for an hour, I spoke for an hour and he listened. He did this thing with his fingertips, like he was drawing something on the tablecloth. Or writing perhaps. Suddenly he excused himself and got up, told me it was very nice to meet me and started to walk away. I wouldn't have said anything if it wasn't for his last words, but they've been echoing like thunder in my sleep ever since you came here. I can't stop thinking about it and I'm afraid I'll go mad if I don't tell you. Or ask you.
He was walking away when he stopped, hand in his pocket, running the other hand through his hair as if deciding whether to turn around or not. He did, and he said: 'Tell her I forgave her a long time ago'.
With all the love I feel for you now, with every beat of my broken heart I ask you: what did you do to him?"
"I met someone at a restaurant in Nice, or was it Antibes? Never mind. It was spring, I saw him sitting alone at another table and somehow we started talking. He was from California but felt he needed to get away as often as possible, just like us. I told him about you. No, I told him about a girl that was coming to spend the summer with me. I told him she was from New York and had a heart as black as midnight.
I described little things I loved about her, how she bites her nails when she's nervous and only wears matching light colored underwear regardless of the season. I told him about the Rose Bar at Gramercy and her morbid obsession with butterflies.
He listened without asking questions, somehow I got the feeling he knew this restless girl I was talking about. I got the feeling he had met you, that he had spent a great deal of his life close to you and knew precisely what I was going to say next. That he had seen that exact same depth in your eyes, those eyes I get so hopelessly lost in whenever I try to understand what you're daydreaming of.
We spoke for an hour, I spoke for an hour and he listened. He did this thing with his fingertips, like he was drawing something on the tablecloth. Or writing perhaps. Suddenly he excused himself and got up, told me it was very nice to meet me and started to walk away. I wouldn't have said anything if it wasn't for his last words, but they've been echoing like thunder in my sleep ever since you came here. I can't stop thinking about it and I'm afraid I'll go mad if I don't tell you. Or ask you.
He was walking away when he stopped, hand in his pocket, running the other hand through his hair as if deciding whether to turn around or not. He did, and he said: 'Tell her I forgave her a long time ago'.
With all the love I feel for you now, with every beat of my broken heart I ask you: what did you do to him?"
Thursday, November 20, 2014
To Père Lachaise and back
He wakes me up at 5 AM, his Bowmore breath
thicker than a rain cloud. He tries to whisper but fails, the cold,
dusty smell of his pinstripe suit tells me he's been smoking more
heavily than usual. "It's time" he slurs as he climbs in to bed with his
shoes on, lies down beside me and gently puts his ivory hand between my
legs. The pressure from his fingers is always just enough, as if he's
done it a million times before.
He picks out clothes for me (a raven dress, champagne ballerinas), then escorts me through the hotel lobby and in to the street to a waiting cab. It's warm and quiet outside, "go" he says and we drive through a city asleep, past the Bastille and in to the 20th arrondissement. I don't need to look out the window to know where're going. I can already feel it.
We get out and start walking past rows of headstones and monuments. He squeezes my hand as if to comfort me but I've never been afraid of the dark or the dead. "I told you you'd get to meet my mother" he whispers, successfully this time, "and you should know I always keep my promises".
He picks out clothes for me (a raven dress, champagne ballerinas), then escorts me through the hotel lobby and in to the street to a waiting cab. It's warm and quiet outside, "go" he says and we drive through a city asleep, past the Bastille and in to the 20th arrondissement. I don't need to look out the window to know where're going. I can already feel it.
We get out and start walking past rows of headstones and monuments. He squeezes my hand as if to comfort me but I've never been afraid of the dark or the dead. "I told you you'd get to meet my mother" he whispers, successfully this time, "and you should know I always keep my promises".
Monday, November 17, 2014
Whatever makes her happy
We go out late on a Sunday because the walls
are closing in and we need to escape somewhere so we dress up in our
blackest clothes with traces of silver and we find a place to breathe
where there's music and dancing and smoke and we're high on a little bit
of everything so the air catches fire with every careless beat of our
broken hearts and these flashes of light come less often now because
we're not as young as we used to be but it doesn't matter 'cause his
eyes are glimmering like stars in a January night sky and I'm his Daisy
or Karenina and they start playing hip hop right after Boys Don't Cry
and we hate it equally much so we fall out in to the street where taxi
cabs run us over and we're almost caught by the police but get away
together down in the dark by the river banks and we're back at the hotel
just when the autumn sun comes up over Paris and I fall asleep somehow
while he's inside me and I dream about stolen diamonds and when he calls
me in the morning it is to say that he has something that he needs to
tell me and he should have done it a long time ago.
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
I feel it in the air
Paris seems prettier now than when we first
came, maybe it's the cold war against this lingering summer warmth that
ultimately soothes my worried mind. We spend much of the afternoon in
the Luxembourg garden around the palace underneath glimmering cascades
of yellow and red and crisp azure skies stretching into infinity.
He talks about his classes and the need for radical reforms (of everything), about summery Christmases in Los Angeles and early memories of his mother. Everything is tinted in pastel purple and pink, filtered through the passing of time and only deep in between the lines are those thin traces of bitterness and grief I've learned to discard as misanthropy.
We stroll down the Boulevard Raspail to Le Bon Marché and look at multicolored trompe l'oeil prints from Mary Katrantzou. "I have a father somewhere" he says, "at least I think I do". Through it all he holds my hand in his and his ivory skin is soft and warm like cotton.
He talks about his classes and the need for radical reforms (of everything), about summery Christmases in Los Angeles and early memories of his mother. Everything is tinted in pastel purple and pink, filtered through the passing of time and only deep in between the lines are those thin traces of bitterness and grief I've learned to discard as misanthropy.
We stroll down the Boulevard Raspail to Le Bon Marché and look at multicolored trompe l'oeil prints from Mary Katrantzou. "I have a father somewhere" he says, "at least I think I do". Through it all he holds my hand in his and his ivory skin is soft and warm like cotton.
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