You broke bread and cracked voices. Accompanied choruses of songs you never bothered to learn. Played God with radio dials and sought salvation in airwaves, leaving translation to the speakerbox. Like a proper disciple-turned-prophet, the static air took artistic liberties and ****** up the message.
In all honesty, you wanted so badly to believe that this time, together, you could out-live the reckoning. That this time you were something divine. But tonight you're too sober to speak and too tired to try. Once again, you apologize. She'll cradle your cheeks just so, with such delicate touch you're almost convinced it's done lovingly. (You've been trained to speak between such parentheses.) You always tell her exactly what she wants to hear but never what she needs to know. You both leapt from this bed, aiming for Space, Hoping for something biblical, but found, once again, that the sky is nothing more than a mausoleum of stars. And what goes up Must come down. From that funeral view the truth collided into you quicker than the avenue below. Now you know what the moon must have felt when the rockets came promising that after this, things will never be the same, then left just as quickly with their pockets full of rocks. You know what it's like when they steal part of you just to put it on display. It takes this distance 238,900 miles, from here to the moon, to leave your Me at ground level and plummet into the second person singular.
From depth like this it's almost as if, it never really happened to you at all.