Last
Mistake
I stumbled in from
the balcony through a wall of vertical blinds and let myself fall
back over the armrest of a loveseat. The room was dark, save for the
television flashes dancing and laughing across the textured white
walls. I watched the world stop with an unsettling silence and waited. I
waited for something to happen.
I settled deep into
the loveseat, heavy with indolence. Thoughts dissolved, synapses
disengaged, molecular bonds, atomic structures fell apart before my
smoke-filled eyes. Even the vertical blinds, still swinging in
perfect cadence with the dancers on the walls, began to blend
together, to lose their own convictions. Every whirling electron, the
whole of the cosmos existed within that little apartment.
For a moment, the
universe made sense, the meaning of life, my role in it, the whole
bit. I needed a record to remember, to live to tell what I had seen,
but my body was too heavy, too tired to find pen and paper.
Then he stumbled
in, disturbing the blinds into a clash of chaos and violence and
imperfect madness, his smile ignorant and unapologetic. Overhead his
ceiling was just a ceiling stained and peeling, and the cosmos was
just an apartment. His hand seized my
calf, and I knew there was nothing I could do. He crept and clambered
or slithered across me
until we were cheek-to-cheek the way I had seen people dance before
in movies or in dreams.
We didn’t dance.
We rose, we
collided, we strained, we resisted, and together we fell, without a
sheet or blush to shield our shame.
And though the
cosmos had vanished, I had known its face, and resentfully, I
accepted my fate.
The sun slid in
through the still vertical blinds, too bright and too late. He was
standing in front of them, an unlit cigarette dangling between his
lips.
There, he almost
said, throwing his old boy scout shirt over my bare legs.
He held out a
carton of cigarettes, as though to offer me a smoke, or his deficient
conversation.
Button by button I
thought I felt a strange sense of nothingness swelling in me, a
desire for a meaning, a reason why, I knew he couldn’t give me, but
would only take away as soon as he got the chance.
A girl in her right
mind might have known the right words to say.
I don’t remember
last night at all, to tell you the truth.
Bitch, he muttered,
or something like it, and parting the vertical blinds, he stepped out
onto the balcony to smoke, while I sat and waited.
I waited for
something to happen.
A poem turned short story.
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