He’s dead to me.
I look at the picture frame. We're smiling. I'm asleep in the baby stroller, my mother's hand stablilizing my tilting head. My sister crouches next me, my borther brother bearing a toothy grin. My father kneels, in the background.
I havn't seen my father in years. His round, squared face, the evenly parted thick shining black hair seem foreign to me. He smiles in the photo, wearing a white short sleeved polo, his skin smooth and pale.
I remember, when I was younger he would come home, smiling, leaving work behind the doorstep. He would lift me, high above his head, and swing me from his arms. I would be a mountain climber, walking sideways along the cabinets, as he held me in place.
I would look out the window in the summer, and watch my father mow the lawn, a mask over his nose to avoid grass blades. In the winter, he would shovel the snow, and watch as I made snow angels and skated on ice puddles.
"You're father's home, honey."
This man is not my father. His face is sallow, his cheeks sunken in. His hair, an ashy gray, a thin layer atop his head. An unsmiling figure, his lip turned down, as though deep in thought. His skin, rough and chapped, like a desert in need of an oasis.
I don't play mountain climber anymore, or make snow angels. I mow the grass now, and shovel the snow.
It's terrifying, what stage three cancer can do to a person.
Please tell me you’re ok.
Please tell me you're ok
That everything is normal
Tell me that you'll be in school
Tomorrow
And everyday after that.
Please tell me you're ok
That you've gone to ask for help
Tell me that you'll talk to me
About everything
And anything.
Please tell me you're ok
That we'll share sandwiches again
Tell me that it's just the flu
And thats why you're not here
Today.
Please tell me you're ok
Wherever you are
Tell me that you're finally happy
And at peace
At last.
. . .
I don't know
if this
is working anymore. - 21:04
I wait for you to say
something. Anything.
It's radio silence on my end.
I know you've seen it
on your phone screen;
you check for notifications
every other minute
when we're together.
Read - 23:42
No reply.
It's as though you never cared,
but I knew that already.
Our shared glances
and shy smiles
have turned to blank stares
and a tilt of the head.
Our instant replies
have become spaced out
by hours on end,
not even bothering
to form sentences anymore.
Ok. - 01:30
I stare at my screen
until it dims,
and eventually fades to black.