The Hopeful Heart
Standing at the water’s edge
You were here with me so long ago.
Now I can only see you when my eyes are closed.
Rain breaks through the steely surface
And smoke leaves your mouth.
It was your third that day, when you looked at me
and said, “Where else can we go?”
We stole a few seconds to ourselves that day
and you seemed so content when we had to say goodbye.
If I could have held your hand for a lifetime,
I would have.
On top of an abandoned table rests a crane,
made of folded coffee receipts
and pieces of napkins ripped into
the shapes of countries litter the floor
where we first learned the
secret songs of each others spirit.
If our story carries on across the oceans,
will it be told as hearts on fire torn apart by time,
or as the synthesis of souls folding together?
You have been through much before,
I see it in the way your eyes won’t meet mine.
In a dirt-floored room I was struck
for the first time with a question.
Am I a puzzle piece kept separate until it is time to play my part
in your larger picture?
Or did we meet so we could learn together
that none of us have our own square stories,
and none of us are truly waiting for a single missing piece?
Sometimes I dream about the music you could have made.
It’s as beautiful as you are when I close my eyes
and feel the hand you pulled away
holding mine, unafraid and content at last.
Wouldn’t that memory have been sweeter than a love
kept secret and played out in quick glances up from the ground?
I collected the shredded pieces of my heart
and taped them back together one night,
so we could learn to love,
complete and whole.
But the next day you kissed me,
goodbye.
All I was left with were the edges you touched,
and a feeling that even if our pieces don’t fit perfectly
we could at least fold together
into something beautiful and new to us both.