Written on the birthday of someone I miss a great deal. |
I wake up without you, and it’s your birthday. Somewhere else, you’re still asleep, alongside someone who is not me, while a bloodshot sun climbs through haze, struggling above the rooves behind the house, and paints my hallway red. I wake up, and it’s your birthday, and I don’t feel like lying in bed this morning, knowing that, somewhere else, you’re going to get up and get dressed and get on with a day that has nothing to do with me. I wake up alone, and it’s your birthday, and the room is cold in spite of the sunlight. The house is quiet except for radiator gurgles, electric hum, and I’m glad of it: I’d rather be alone in private, while I come to terms with the strange, uncomfortable fit of the day, like an oversized shoe, slipping and raising blisters. I wake up, and my mouth is already filled with the sharp taste of missing you, and even before I open my eyes, I know what the date is, and again there’s that cold trickle of loss, that plummeting sucker-punch of remembering you’ve gone. I wake up in a bed that feels emptier than usual, and spend those first few moments of consciousness losing you all over again. From the open window: scratchy birdsong; a far-off hungry chorus of dogs; stuttering footsteps and traffic noises; the dawn shift going to work - business as usual - as though today was the same as any other. In a couple of hours, the letterbox will rattle, and I’ll hear the flat, dull slap of bills and bank statements spat onto the carpet, or the telephone will ring, and I’ll ignore it. I wake up, and it’s your birthday, somewhere. |