You called me today and asked me to listen, in so many words. Two faces on my computer screen, waiting, and your voice floating at the end of the line. We are back on the grass, under your tree, the sidewalks of Melbourne under our shoes (the outsole on my left foot coming apart from my arches). A heartbroken girl, confused and with more words than she can carry.
You emailed him, and he did not reply. You texted him, and he did not reply. You woke in the morning and wanted to hear his voice, panicked that he would be silent forever, denying you his last words. You called him, and he did not pick up. In the back of my mind, the words tickled me, emerging from a hazy bubble of a half forgotten reference. “Do not be that girl.”
Good advice or a bad call? Now it is my voice that floats. My hands and fingers are nimble over the gleaming water-shined glasses and plates from the dishwasher, the bang and slam of cupboard doors like messages from other worlds, the blinking light on the answering machine behind my ears. I am thinking, “Be a good friend.” I am thinking, “I don’t understand.”
Is it a writer’s curse to invent words to string together as you speak, your lips like the nibs of pens, the lead tips of pencils and your tongue and breath the ink? Never have I understood air better than when I am pretending to know what I am talking about. Here is heartbreak, here is denied self-worth, here is desperation and a need to understand. Here is another person. Two people, in love and out.
And the script says.
*
Over the kitchen counter I can feel the rush of air conditioning as I dawdle with my water glass to hear you speak. You’re a book I learned to read, a well-thumbed magazine in a doctor’s waiting room. Repeat visits. It is getting harder to keep being positive with you. Always somewhere in your many caveats and validations — excuses — there are the dark, burning embers of surrender. Being happy is the most difficult thing any of us can ever try to achieve. It seems.
Once, months ago, when you told me about this thing now that has finally found its legs, I told you that I would say this one thing once, and only once. “I think this is a terrible idea.” And once it was said, I would be happy for you.
I lied. God, how I lied.
I imagine us as broken phonographs in this kitchen, bleating our glitchy tunes at each other. “It’ll be fine.” “I know.” “It’s tricky.” “I mean…” I do not know what I am saying to you. I turn and inch my way to the kitchen door and leave. A half-turn, a half-smile, an exit. It seemed better than anything else I could have conjured up, cheap tricks.
*
And through undersea cables, my loved ones speak. A best friend with two heads, and a sister with a husband out of frame. We repeat stories and tread soft, familiar ground. There is silence, and the palpable lack of anything to say. The palpable need to keep talking. I would rather have this.
The little green symbol next to my avatar goes green and gray in turns, Skype in Morse code. Our images grainy, squeezed through our camera dots, our voices out of sync with our lips, overlapping and drowning out. We tread water and float. A hum breaks free from the base of my throat, and I close my eyes to think. What else to say? What else to say?
I would rather have this.
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