We were so young that summer. So fresh and vivid and stupid, rushing through our days when we should have been reaching and searching for more life, content instead to find it in each other’s eyes (yours sleepy, mine bright) still only knee-deep in the world.
We walked there under the trees, hearts beating fast feet moving slow golden light dappling our faces, sweaty palm to sun-burnt cheek, yearning like birds for another day to hold each other another way to know each other another May to love each other— still uncertain of what love really was, but more than certain we were in it.
So I planted my feet on that unforgiving cement while the breeze teased our skin how your kisses teased my heart, and I squeezed out a few hot tears as you pulled my body against yours, and we parted.
This sweet sorrow would have been so much simpler had we known that our beggar’s prayer would have been heard; that we would get our second May, and even soon a third; that year after year of affection would be defined by hot summer days, spent in the happy attention of young love’s hot summer gaze.
But I wish instead we could have known that in the seasons in between we would have hardened, we would have grown and changed in ways that can’t be seen. That deep in our marrow, beneath limber bone, some spiteful little switch would flip and turn our softened hearts to stone— I’ve heard some call this growing up.
We dove headfirst into the truth that we knew nothing of, but was it love that stole my youth, or age that killed my love?