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She told me she kept all the letters. She still has them, maybe in a box somewhere Under the bed, the pages yellowed and fading. And maybe they promised that when they were old They would sit down and read them together And laugh at their younger selves and how She still can’t decipher his handwriting After all these years. And he’ll imagine the scribbles into the words He wrote in a fit of long distance love And read them aloud to her in the same voice He used to proof-read Before he sealed them with a kiss And put them in the mail Twelve-hundred miles Louisiana to Upstate New York. He was from down south A rebellious, liberal genius In a world of bigoted racists Living in another frame of mind. She was from New York, Another time, another life, But the same frame of mind As the boy she met by some bizarre coincidence In the city of angels Which may or may not have guided them Which may or may not have wished them on Which may or may not have taken him away. They met once But it was enough To keep those handwritten letters flowing back and forth Across states, passed along by people oblivious To the potential that they held in their hands Getting heavier with each crossing. Addresses changed, parents’ homes to college dorms Just as far away, but just as close to their hearts As they had been in high school. And when they met again, they felt their last letters in their hands And realized letters weren’t sufficient any more And the packages of potential, carried across states by strangers, finally passed From hand to hand As hand and hand connected And pulled them across states To meet in the middle at an alter And vow to never part again. Papers piled on top of letters, Two new birth certificates, two children’s drawings As indecipherable as his handwritten scribbles But just as meaningful. And she looked on as the boys grew up, two of the only angels That she ever believed in. Because who can believe in angels When they take one of yours away The one you met in their city The one who flew letters across miles and miles Just to lift your spirits Into a kind of heaven that few people ever know Until it’s taken away Too young to die Too young to leave her Too young to leave his kids Who are old enough to feel the grief But too young to fight it. And they cry as the doctors unplug the machines Leaving the broken mind to float away And she comforts them Because she knows no comfort herself And she doesn’t know what else to do with herself Except get her kids ready in the morning And go to work with the fake smile she’s keeps forgetting to take off before she goes to bed Because now there’s no one there to remind her. And she still has the letters, sitting in a box under her bed Yellowed and crumpled. She told me she hasn’t gone through them. But why would she, When she now has no one to help her decipher the scribbles, No one to sit on the bed beside her, an arm around her shoulder To recite them from memory As if he wrote them yesterday. No one to laugh as she looks over the reading glasses that she never needed Twenty years ago And whisper in her ear That the decade old, faded, unreadable pencil mark Still meant “I love you” After all these years.
0
Apr 30, 2014
Apr 30, 2014 at 5:26 PM UTC
Letters From A New Angel
She told me she kept all the letters. She still has them, maybe in a box somewhere Under the bed, the pages yellowed and fading. And maybe they promised that when they were old They would sit down and read them together And laugh at their younger selves and how She still can’t decipher his handwriting After all these years. And he’ll imagine the scribbles into the words He wrote in a fit of long distance love And read them aloud to her in the same voice He used to proof-read Before he sealed them with a kiss And put them in the mail Twelve-hundred miles Louisiana to Upstate New York. He was from down south A rebellious, liberal genius In a world of bigoted racists Living in another frame of mind. She was from New York, Another time, another life, But the same frame of mind As the boy she met by some bizarre coincidence In the city of angels Which may or may not have guided them Which may or may not have wished them on Which may or may not have taken him away. They met once But it was enough To keep those handwritten letters flowing back and forth Across states, passed along by people oblivious To the potential that they held in their hands Getting heavier with each crossing. Addresses changed, parents’ homes to college dorms Just as far away, but just as close to their hearts As they had been in high school. And when they met again, they felt their last letters in their hands And realized letters weren’t sufficient any more And the packages of potential, carried across states by strangers, finally passed From hand to hand As hand and hand connected And pulled them across states To meet in the middle at an alter And vow to never part again. Papers piled on top of letters, Two new birth certificates, two children’s drawings As indecipherable as his handwritten scribbles But just as meaningful. And she looked on as the boys grew up, two of the only angels That she ever believed in. Because who can believe in angels When they take one of yours away The one you met in their city The one who flew letters across miles and miles Just to lift your spirits Into a kind of heaven that few people ever know Until it’s taken away Too young to die Too young to leave her Too young to leave his kids Who are old enough to feel the grief But too young to fight it. And they cry as the doctors unplug the machines Leaving the broken mind to float away And she comforts them Because she knows no comfort herself And she doesn’t know what else to do with herself Except get her kids ready in the morning And go to work with the fake smile she’s keeps forgetting to take off before she goes to bed Because now there’s no one there to remind her. And she still has the letters, sitting in a box under her bed Yellowed and crumpled. She told me she hasn’t gone through them. But why would she, When she now has no one to help her decipher the scribbles, No one to sit on the bed beside her, an arm around her shoulder To recite them from memory As if he wrote them yesterday. No one to laugh as she looks over the reading glasses that she never needed Twenty years ago And whisper in her ear That the decade old, faded, unreadable pencil mark Still meant “I love you” After all these years.
A true story about my friend's parents. They met in high school. He died of a stroke this year at age 43.
tess
Written by
American
Apr 30, 2014
Apr 30, 2014 at 5:26 PM UTC
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