To love Stardust
Beautiful, green eyes, color the hair of honey, an all American girl,
oh, how I want to hold her hand, beautiful.
But I've never uttered a word to her and she can't tell me apart from the
rest of the crowd.
I'm just another ordinary boy, in love with a girl who won't give him a
second look.
A beauty she is, but her heart can never belong to someone like me.
A boyfriend twice my size, on the football team, blonde hair, blue eyes with
superiority that should make me think twice.
They fit with one another, ever so perfectly.
It would be wrong of me to ruin that, so I watch her from afar. I wonder if
she'd mind.
All American girl, all American boy.
I've told myself, time and time again, "I'm going to talk to her today.
She's going to love me," but I keep walking every time, and every time, I
go back to loving her in that special place, unrequited.
Her favorite color is purple.
Her favorite band is the Strokes.
She lives for the sunshine and if it weren't for her contacts, she'd wear
glasses.
She lives with her dad and wants to visit Paris.
She quit the cheer squad because she doesn't like their routines and because
she didn't want to be the cheerleader-dates-football-player stereotype. Gets a bit tipsy at parties and wears flannels on Tuesdays.
She chips her nails and can't manage to beat traffic on Mondays, showing up
to school at 7:49, every other day. She has two friends, girls, one's middle name is Zoey.
She takes showers in the middle of the night and doesn't eat breakfast on
Friday, because she uses that time to apply make-up. She hates being part of trends, and she's not exactly the most popular.
She doodles little trees on the margins of her notebooks.
She has a guilty pleasure; on some days after school, on other days during
lunch, she sits in the library, cuddled against the romance shelf, engulfed in
a novel.
She'll never know my name.
She'll never know my favorite constellation or my zodiac sign.
But to me, she's a bit like a star.
She seems so close, but when I take a step back, I realize she's so far
away.
She seems to spend all the time in her head, travel to the moon and back.
What is the thinking of?
Could it be me?
Oh, don't be so silly.
She's a bit like the moon.
Everyone sees the wonder of her, but all she sees is how alone she is
compared to the world.
She's a bit like a comet.
Hurdling light years past you and you might miss her, but once you see her
from up close, you'll see all the craters that have hit her over time and how
small impacts have completely altered her course.
She's a bit like shooting stars.
I've never seen something so illuminating that I am left in awe.
She's a little bit like a black hole.
Once you're sucked in, there's no way out.
She's a bit like a soft love song.
She's a bit like an ornament of silver.
I can never tell you her favorite constellation.
I can never tell you what she thinks of on the clear night skies while
looking at the moon.
I can never tell you the first observatory she visited.
I can never tell you what her room looks like or where she wants to live.
I can never tell you what she does once she gets home or if she smells like
outer space.
I can never tell you what she wants to do in life or even before she dies.
Because even stars- how many light years old they may be- all die.
Even after death, preserved she will be, stardust, up for display in a
museum, quiet and empty, for no one to see.
After death, all I'm ever going to be is ashes, dumped out, into the sea,
mistaken for sand, resting with all those who were never meant to be.
There's a space for her, of degrees below Celcius, frigid. Only 17 and
there's already a spot in the vastly calm darkness for her, even if she can be
reckless at times, as long as it doesn't take her over.
Then her all-American football player boyfriend took her ornament of silver,
carefully crafted and thought he held nothing but an ornament, not knowing he
was holding the world in his hands. Her ornament of silver fell on the floor
for everyone to see. She fell to her knees, not caring about the scene, holding
the particles of stardust in her arms, hugging what was left of her so closely,
not even tears could mend what was left of a star, no, it was too hard.
So I wrote her this letter,
and I left her some flowers,
from a Secret Admirer.
I saw her beam,
she looked left and right,
but couldn't find the admirer.
It was while writing in this letter, I asked her to be my date for the
upcoming Valentine's dance. For the moment I watched her, I felt her little
ornament of silver in my fist, resurrected. I'd never laid my eyes on anything
more breathtakingly beautiful.
Oh, I could've died.
I was eager to meet her,
so many times I'd fantasized,
let my mind drift near hers,
through cosmic variables,
spoil myself with all the lovely things I could say to her,
and she'd see me,
suit and tie,
realize I've been the one all along.
Valentine's night fell on a thin coat of breeze and dim lighting. She was
waiting outside, in the hallway. The white wall she was leaning
against complimented her sun-kissed skin and green eyes. Her hair, curled, the
color of honey. A dark blue dress, the color of the night sky. I didn't breathe
for a second or two, maybe more. Her lips were glossed with a flirty pink. She
looked so darling in those silver heels. Oh, I just couldn't think, she deserved
to be loved.
But the way cowards do and have always done,
I kept walking,
walked right past her,
and into the heap of red and pink lights,
right into the dance,
took a seat.
For 10 minutes I debated returning outside for her or leaving out fate to
chance, maybe my ashes would meet her stardust again in another life.
"Hello." I stood next to her.
"Hey," she replied, a vodka flask peaking out of her small bag.
"You've been out here for a while now."
She nodded. I looked off into the distance, into the sky, clouds, no stars, no
stardust.
Without that extra reel of support, I collect scraps of bravery the clouds
left me. "I came alone and it looks like you've been stood up if I'm
telling you the honest truth. Surely he has his reasons for missing out on you
tonight, but right now, you don't have to waste another moment. So I ask, would
you like to go inside and have a dance, maybe two?"
Her green eyes seep into mine and her hesitance makes me wish I were blind.
How did I ever think I stood a chance, think that ashes and stardust- She takes
my hand and I open my eyes.
Inside, blinded by love songs and tacky blubbery babies,
we sway against each other,
she hands me her flask from time to time.
We're both tipsy before the night even starts. She smells like blueberries
and cinnamon. It almost reminds me of pancakes. She smells like morning
sunrises. She doesn't smell like the cosmos or supernovas.
We're slow dancing now and she's hearing the erratic elevation of my
heartbeats as her head rests on my chest. She looks up at me, unwraps a hand
from around my neck and brings it to my cheek. My heart speeds, so I close my
eyes, hope it isn't a dream.
Then I feel her warm breath in my ear, I open my eyes. "I know you've
been watching me." My ear may be warm, but my heart turns cold because my
pulse has stopped and I exhale my final breath.
I look down at her hoping to god she's joking, but instead she's searching
for the answers in my eyes. She whispers, "It's okay. I've been watching
you too." She must be kidding. This doesn't happen. Ashes don't compare to
stardust, never have, never will. I must be dreaming. I hold onto her tighter,
because it can only be someone's idea of a sick joke. My eyes scan the room, no
one's watching. It's just her and I. "Can we go outside?" she asks.
I nod and lead her out the door. We sit and I see her body tense as her skin
makes contact with the metal bench. She continues the conversation, "You
know my favorite color is purple, that I listen to the Strokes, I live with my
dad and I used to wear glasses, but I wonder: How long have you been watching
me?"
I avert my eyes as she's searching for mine. "Sometimes, when you hide
out in the library, reading romance novels, you have the volume so high, I can
hear it from the aisle away. Most of the time it's the Strokes."
"What's in the next section?"
"Mystery and thriller novels. How- How long have you known?" Due
to the alcohol in my bloodstream, I find myself a little more honest and a
little more friendly. I remove my blazer and hang it on her shoulders. She fits
her hands through the sleeves, too large for her, I laugh and she's laughing
with me.
She lies down, her head on my lap. "The day you left the flowers and
letters in my locker. You were watching me before I even got there. I pretended
to be so engrossed in the letter, but from the corner of my eye, you were
staring, but when I searched for your face, you turned away. I've had a couple
suspects in mind, but then I saw you walk in and I was almost, almost sure it
was you, but you kept walking. I began to wonder if there was an admirer after
all. Then you asked me to dance, and I, I just knew." My fingers are
gently caressing her cheeks, rosy from the 50 degree weather. She repeats the
question with the same tenderness as before, "How long have you been
watching me?"
I lick my lips, not ready to answer the question, so I hang my head in
shame, but I begin, "It was the end of sophomore year. You needed to have
your entire schedule changed because of reasons left to speculation. What made
it even weirder was that there was only a month left of school. Every time a
new student transferred, 5 students would share who they are. The new student
goes last. I sat all the way across the room. After everyone went, you asked
the girl next to you if she could record it on your phone. Unlike everyone
else, you walked up to the front of the classroom and told us about yourself.
'Hey, my name is Cordelia, but everyone just calls me Nova. My favorite color's
purple and I live with my dad.' You wore your glasses, but once junior year
began, they were gone."
She's rubbing my hand with her free one and finishes the memory with
me,"I wanted to reassure my dad that I was going to do just fine."
She presses her fingers to her temple and complains about her dizziness, too
intoxicated. She laughs at her low tolerance, "Don't you ever do anything
other than stare?"
I smile weakly. She continues, "Tell me, what's your favorite
color?"
"Navy."
"Favorite band?"
"The Killers."
"What do you want to be when you grow up?"
"Filmmaker."
"Why?"
"I love telling stories."
She's intrigued, but lowers her voice to a hum. "You see? Now am I that
unapproachable?"
She begins telling me about her life, all the Whys and Hows of it all.
Spaces I had so carefully filled with details the size of small specks, but
there she was, telling me she quit the cheer squad because of a leg injury.
I've always told myself it's because she doesn't want to be a high school
stereotype. She gets to school late on Mondays because she smokes a quick joint
in her backyard. I've always told myself it's because she stays up a bit later
than on most nights, reading romance novels.
She's telling me all these things but I don't want to hear the Whys and the
Hows. It's a lot better when she leaves that up to me.
She gets up, her head off my lap, hugs her stomach, groans, then bitterly
laughs. "You know what sucks?" She doesn't wait for my response but
continues, "I never drink, and I've drank so much that I probably won't
remember tomorrow." She remains in the same position until it is clear to
her she won't throw up.
In a sense I'm almost happy she won't remember, because then we can go back
to the way we were before. A before where our love is unrequited.
She asks me to take her home, so I do. On the ride there I find myself
thinking how much easier it is, to love her on a land she doesn't know about,
on a land she'll never visit. I walk her to the front steps of her porch.
"Thank you," she says, handing me back my blazer.
"For the ride? Oh, it was no problem-"
"No," she cuts me off. "For loving me, when no one else knew
it, when no one else would. Thank you for giving me the love story I've long
awaited." I see shivers run up her spine. It's something so wonderful, so
frightening at the same time. "After this," she continues,
"We'll go out on a couple dates, fall deeper in love, and one day, we'll
tell the story again, time after time, happy." I wonder if she'd tell me
all these things while sober.
It's a lot more easier admire her from afar, watch her walk away than it is
to chase after her and ask her to stay.
She hands me her number, tells me we should go out this weekend. I smile
broadly, knowing perfectly well, I won't call. "I'm glad you found me. I
know there's going to be so much more to us."
The next morning, I watched her in the library, next to the romance shelf.
A goofy grin on her face, staring up at the ceiling, fantasizing, letting
her mind drift near mine.