At five am this morning I closed my door, quiet and slow, and Crept out into the blackness. It was silent. Dead silent. The stoplights were throwing velvety pools of light on the street And I was drawn to the center of it I placed my strides between the two yellow lines And I started walking. I just went. I can't say whether five minutes passed, or ten, or twenty, But eventually I left the road and doubled back To the little bridge where you first kissed me. And I sat there in the dark With my legs dangling over a galaxy of reflected stars Meteors with tails of mirrored streetlight, Gold and shimmering, A shadow cut-out of a person set in a silhouette of black water against a splash of light. I lay my cheek on the cold metal of the rail, And let it all seep into me- The night, the cold, the glow of the stars. My fingers brushed a little husk at the base of it And I recognized the flower I'd placed there Last time I'd walked across that bridge. I'd been late. Late by a lot. Hurrying. Rushing. And I thought, Mikaila you are stupid for stopping to pick this flower. But I did it anyway. I always do it. Every single time I walk over that bridge, No matter who with, I pick a flower And set it at the base of that railing In the spot where you kissed me. I never give any explanation. I just put one there, every time. The tiny delicate thing crumbled at my touch And the dust was taken by the wind across the shining water. There I stayed for a long, long time, And eventually I lay back and looked up at the stars. There is a very bright one out this month, A planet, somebody told me. It was directly above me, glowing with cold, clear light, And I told it That I love you And just then one of the tiny stars right by it Dove across the universe And landed in the lake at my feet.