Kalliope 2014.pdf May. 2014 | Page 138

The music was loud and the air was cold. And when the stars came out during the encore we were still dancing. We were at a concert once. I don’t remember what day it was, but I remember that she was wearing a light blue t-shirt with one of those useless breast pockets that had a ketchup stain on it, so it was probably warm outside. A breeze would come every once in a while. I remember because she kept pushing the hair out of her face and brushing it behind her ears. She didn’t have her ears pierced. Whenever the breeze came the hair on her arms would stand up and she would rub her hands up and down her biceps and shrug her shoulders up to her ears and stay like that even after the breeze had disappeared. Maybe it was spring. Early spring. When you know it’s supposed to be warm and the thought makes you excited. So excited that you go outside in a light blue, stained t-shirt and tell yourself that the cold is gone, but really it’s not, not yet. It’s lingering, just long enough to feel the warmth too. So let’s say it was early spring. Maybe March. The concert was long, and we sang into the night until half a moon came out, reflecting light from the invisible sun and moving the tides closer, then farther away from us. Orion was directly overhead. I pointed it out to her. She squinted and looked up, pretending to see. To her they were something to marvel at, write about, wonder about their complexity. But to me they were just stars, giant masses of gas burning millions of light years away, positioned just right so that we could see them, at this very moment, while that band played that song and she was dancing around me, looking at the stars and whispering about what they hold. Nothing, I said. They don’t hold anything. She just danced and shook her head, already writing a poem that I wouldn’t understand. So I just held her hand and twirled her around and let her stare and point and write. She was so high that night that she actually believed she was swimming among the stars, above the clouds where time doesn’t matter and gravity has no effect on her. The drugs stayed in her brain for a while, until they set her down gently on the ground, away from the stars, back to time and gravity and me. I held her close that night, turning over her palm, looking into her eyes, trying to see what she sees, but all she saw were stars. I turned a few pages, the memories of us happy and outside making 136