Thank you, velvet ribbon of time, for finally ending April; I cry more in that month than in any other, and it is piteous, and awkward, and a defeat for all of my senses. Cruel month for a cruel girl in a cruel world. Walking beside the tall wire fence between the dirt path and the diamond, the whip-like crack of the cowhide is like a petal drifting through the air. I pause there, held fast, sneakered toes against the wet grass, hearing the scattered noise from the game. Did you know that here, in this exact spot, two-hundred years ago, the lord commanded his servants to plant a tidy square of purple-and-white irises?
The key to the hydraulic press in my torso gives its regular turn. There’s a breeze coming off the river below and because only it sees my face, only it knows I am a coward. Oh, clearer waters, be tender rather than fair. I stand on the castle walls, bleeding like a stuck pig. I sow dissent now but when the soldiers return, a bannered column at the foot of the mountain, I will say anything if it means I will keep my life. I will cry blood and then toe the line with the passion of a martyr’s best and most idiotic disciple. Is there anything worse than a changeable mind? Lanterns floating in the fog just before midnight. The swallows, insufferable in their cherubic beauty, in their precise and carefree flight. For the first time in a long time, all my dreams are bloody. I wake with the guilt like tartar on my gumline. Some things, even the holy powers of the tenderest river will refuse to cleanse.
This site needs JavaScript like I need a hole in the head. I play stupid games, like watching the sunlight glaze the rice fields from the airplane until my corneas burn, breaking my own heart over and over. I fantasize about everything that feels like it could be third nature. Good, bad, and some third thing? Right, wrong, but some third thing? Spared you, during the last afternoon of our sparring, just to then feel your fist like a hammer against my C7 when my back was turned. But how I can be angry when your only crime is to have interpreted the signs correctly? I did not hurt you, though we both knew I could, and you recognized that this restraint was nothing but the mask, sword and robes of pity. Yes, fine. I could put on that red sackcloth and sermonize for hours about it. Don’t try me. Don’t test me. I’ve won this game before and all it took was the full betrayal and destruction of myself, plus everything I presumed to call a principle of the faith. I would do it again for even the smallest and meanest prize.
Stitched ball arcing through the air. Swallow in its nest of muddy gray pellets and curly hair. I still remember being a young girl in the security line, shoulders hunched from the weight of my carry-on, mouth dry and tongue burned, face set forward like a flag. Crossing through the gates, walking stiffly through the scanner, collecting my bag and my ticket at the other end, tears standing at attention in my eyes. A ribbon in my ponytail. A broken stem in a field of irises. “It’s okay,” I told myself then, “You won’t always be alone.” How could I know then that the division was inside me already? That even at my best, it could not be avoided—I was born severed? Oh but back then, I expected to come home someday. I thought that this was everyone’s destiny, even those of us who are cowards, soldiers, priests, or all of the above. I didn’t know then that no matter where I was, no matter where I went, no matter what I had or didn’t, one part of me would forever be a stranger to the rest.