Josephine
Sea salt and missing girls
They won’t miss us, she promised hurriedly
While we climbed the highest rocks and played as gods
We declared the ocean our playground and the beach our domain
She said we’d fly far away from here
We’d fly so high, she told me, the immortals on Olympus would envy us
But we failed to learn from Icarus
His sacrifice was in vain
Her toes on the edge as I clamored to keep up
Her chin tilted upwards in blatant defiance as if daring Zeus to strike her down
My eyes averted toward the water for just a moment too long
Lavender gossamer clung to olive skin and chocolate tresses covered her face
I was glad for that; I couldn’t bear to see her then, in her last moments
I like to imagine her as she was the night before
She never looked so beautiful
I imagine nobody else thought her much to look at
And as the daughter of a viscount, she wasn’t even a lady, my cousins sneered
Without a dowry, she would have been unremarkable
But a girl like her would never settle for a word like that
So she danced with whomever she pleased but at first, that list didn’t include me
We sat across from each other during dinner
And I could make her smile by sticking my tongue out and crossing my eyes whenever the man sitting next to her turned away
Eventually, we sought each other out in crowded rooms
In three weeks, we were never apart
My grandmother saw us one night in the library when we should’ve been asleep
But she didn’t tell anyone
She told me she used to have a friend like Josephine was to me
But I wanted to tell her that we weren’t friends
Friends didn’t sneak into the other’s room for a moment of repreive from boasts about wealth and status veiled behind almost compliments and offhanded comments
We weren’t friends
But I didn’t know the word for daring, brave girl who didn’t care if our love was unlawful or amoral
Didn’t care about the suitors- not to mention her family- she was letting down by choosing me
Setting her hands on my waist where everyone could see
And maybe if I had been brave like her
I would have found a way to save her
I didn’t know how to say she put the sun in the sky and taught me about the stars
I didn’t know how to say I loved her
We didn’t talk about the love letters
We didn’t think about forever
We thought we were entitled to a lifetime together
She didn’t know how to keep a secret, not like me
So by the time luncheon concluded on the first day of our final week together
Her maid had found the letters strewn across her quilt that she had been reading and forgot to put away
The library was silent as she and I sat on opposite sides of the room
My father yelled and so did hers
Our mothers had been left in the dark because as they insisted, “The women should not have to witness the shame of their daughters.”
Of course, my mother found out, and she wasn’t angry
At me, but she blamed my father for inviting “that family” to vacation with us for the summer
To her, a decent status and an overflowing trust fund meant you could do no wrong, but clearly I was proof to the contrary
I didn’t look at Josephine for a long time
I couldn’t bear to see what I had done to the only person who mattered to me
I remembered all those hours of hiding and vacant stares during dances because all we could think of was what the other was doing
I can’t imagine how many toes I stepped on to get closer to her
The time we shared would never be replaced
“We’ll dance like real people do,” she whispered one night when the ballroom was empty
More daring than we’d ever been, we started slowly and quietly
Hesitantly taking a step closer and awkwardly arranging our limbs that didn’t seem to fit anywhere
But it was like magic to waltz in her arms
Never had I danced with anyone without feeling insecure and unworthy, but she made me feel brilliant and confident
Her skirts swirled around mine until we painted the world in pearlescent periwinkle and peach blossom
Before I could whisper I love you
A maid’s stern cough brought us out of our daydream and suddenly, we just schoolchildren, bashful and guilty
Caught in the act of something sinful and wrong
She promised me we were innocent, that we weren’t sick like they said and we didn’t belong in an asylum either
When the roses had begun to shrivel up like unwanted fruit, our parents started making plans to leave
We found ourselves in a place we’d been so many times before
A long dinner of solemn faces had made us anxious
Our “misstep,” as her father called it, had made everyone grim
And everyone knew it was us
Even the servants didn’t look at us the same anymore
They put us at opposite ends of the table, put uncles and cousins and family friends in between us like prison guards
We managed to escape their careful watch outside the drawing room while everyone headed to bed
So beside the wilting rose bushes, outside my parents’ bedroom window, we made a plan
In the garden close to midnight, I panned for gold in the flecks in her hazel eyes
And she promised we’d run away and no one needed to know where
My lace gloves recalled how it felt to caress her cheek a final time at the crest of the cliff
The seafoam unevenly swept across the coastline
And I felt like crying
Because inside I was dying
If we couldn’t be together, I didn’t know how to go on without her
I was naïve enough not to consider that as a possibility
And maybe her father was right and we got what we deserved
Our wings were made of wax and glass, leftover love letters and whispered promises
The sea breeze would only carry us so far
It was foolish to say otherwise
Crumpled like a passed over Valentine, two steps from being washed away with the tide, broken and defeated, was not how I wanted to remember her
We’re not heroes
Or angels or gods or monsters or mermaids or sirens
We’re not dryads or sea nymphs
We’re mortals and we break when we fall
And we all fall eventually