All Nonfiction
- Bullying
 - Books
 - Academic
 - Author Interviews
 - Celebrity interviews
 - College Articles
 - College Essays
 - Educator of the Year
 - Heroes
 - Interviews
 - Memoir
 - Personal Experience
 - Sports
 - Travel & Culture
 All Opinions
- Bullying
 - Current Events / Politics
 - Discrimination
 - Drugs / Alcohol / Smoking
 - Entertainment / Celebrities
 - Environment
 - Love / Relationships
 - Movies / Music / TV
 - Pop Culture / Trends
 - School / College
 - Social Issues / Civics
 - Spirituality / Religion
 - Sports / Hobbies
 All Hot Topics
- Bullying
 - Community Service
 - Environment
 - Health
 - Letters to the Editor
 - Pride & Prejudice
 - What Matters
 - Back
 
Summer Guide
- Program Links
 - Program Reviews
 - Back
 
College Guide
- College Links
 - College Reviews
 - College Essays
 - College Articles
 - Back
 
Dear D. MAG
  Dear D.
  We should have taken away the ceiling lights
  and watched as they were pulled to the sky.
  When they shot into a mountain of clouds,
  we should have let the walls around us drop,
  let them fall in perfect unison
  like the two planes we saw
  spiraling toward the earth
  in a trail of smoke
  in that movie the other night.
  We should have kicked aside the bags
  to our left, my black suitcase
  sorely arranged among the pile
  like a lost airline ticket
  whose take-off time tasted like salty coffee
  against the tip of my tongue.
  Bags bulging with clothes, including that
  knee-length dress you saw me wear
  during the dance we shared
  beneath the ribbon of stars –
  when I flopped onto the grass
  which was gray in the semi-darkness,
  no shame as I watched you
  out of the corner of my eye, your face
  naked under the moonlight, glowing
  like that statue of Dionysus
  in the city museum.
  We should have silenced the shuffle
  of conversation echoing throughout the room.
  We should have removed the air between us –
  subtracted the proud and unyielding, to get
you and me
  face to face, from when we actually stood
  in the lobby that last day, hands awkwardly
  by our sides, our lips
  unmoving except for the incoherent mutters
  emerging from our throats,
  comparable to that of gutter water.
  All you did was look away toward your phone
  before I turned and left.
  Now I see you in the strangest of places –
  in a salad, the orange of my pencil,
  loitering in front of walls
  separating the men’s and women’s rooms.
  I feel your body in the way my sneakers
  bend as they flex and scrape
  against the sidewalk, I hear your voice
  grinding into the rumble of oncoming trains
  and this is all because the dam didn’t break
  that day at the hotel lobby.
   

Similar Articles
JOIN THE DISCUSSION
This article has 0 comments.