Ok, Then

“Ok, Then”

 

You are gone. Ok, then.

You did not leave the morning after packing

in the night, when I wouldn’t fight.

You did not love in the morning after packing

in the night, when I couldn’t answer,

didn’t have words for your “Why do you care?”

There is a palm tree growing

in my new bathtub

but we are waiting to see what happens.

 

The heart-shaped scab

that tattooed my ring finger for ages

is almost completely grown out.

You’d put another decoration there,

but I don’t want it, don’t know

why I don’t like kissing you anymore,

your face a strange bird in my face.

Ok, then, maybe I don’t like kissing.

There is a matchmaker floating

outside my balcony

but we are waiting to see what happens.

 

But look, you named me.

No one else could,

no one else would want to.

My parents did it wrong—

I don’t blame them.

They didn’t know me.

Only you have known me

well enough to name me.

Ok, then. That will never

in either of our lifetimes

happen again.

There is a vat of holy water

boiling on my stove

but we are waiting to see what happens.

 

The widowed waxess

who touches me

with gentle purpose

says I should go to the beach

every day, she would go to the beach

every day if she had my body.

Ok, then. You should join a dating site,

I tell her, offering to make

an account, it’s free, let’s do it now.

Maybe in a few years, she says,

when I’m ready.

When I buy a black bikini

and go to the beach? I say.

There is a seagull tapping

on her office window

but we are waiting to see what happens.

 

It doesn’t hurt.

Sometimes I’m hurt

and don’t know it.

Once I burned myself

with a cigarette

and didn’t know it until I itched

and looked down from the road

at my jeans, freshly polka-dotted

with fire and ash. Ok, then.

There is a fire

in my new shoes

but I am waiting to see what happens. 

 

We went to the beach

in the bikini that’s as old now

as I was when we met.

A greeting squadron of

leaping dolphins walked with us

and I could smell the salt,

could feel the sun’s warmth

in ways I had forgotten,

been numb to,

felt only the pain of missing

the ability to feel.

Ok, then. The cold at last has cleared

from my nose, from my skin.

There is a tornado spinning out

from the warmth of this joy

and the cold of my fear

that I will see my father here—

the tragic hero returns, tolerably disguised,

home to the city she never knew.

Is unrecognized for her own good,

and chaos ensues as we knew it would—

but we are waiting to see what happens.

 

You gave me

what I think must be

the happiest moment of my life,

the day I came home

from another man’s arms

and you had decided you loved me.

I was afraid you were going to kill me,

the love in your face hot and closed

the love in your face familiar and strange

the love in your face a gust of gale

picking up my umbrella

and me with it,

carrying me a small distance up and away

but not too far.

Ok, then. Storms end.

But we are waiting to see what happens.

 

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