Marilyn Monroe |
Straw I had ripped all of it down Folded the tape back on itself The thought of doing it all again Never crossed my mind, how naïve of me. It couldn’t have been any more than a year, and then again and then again. Until the tape was thicker than the photographs, the quotes that made me think of a home. When I never had one. I had ripped all of it down. The first time. Layered it in a box? Or a suitcase? The act of doing so repeated until I couldn’t remember which. She was last. Laid gently down in cloth Like a body into a casket. I wonder who has that job, and if they are as careful as I was with her porcelain face. I pray that it’s a human, and not a machine, who lays the dead to rest atop their satin sheets. I wrapped her, over and over; each layer precaution after precaution. I wouldn’t take any chances with her parted lips, a woman who made beauty famous. Molded. Blonde. She was the center-piece. A protrusion. I didn’t guess but I should have, after everything. Seeing the slivers of china embedded in the folds of stuffed animal limbs and summery blouses. I was skin-less, home-less, help-less. I needed something breathing to blame. Something to blame for more than just the colored dusty remains but for the fact that she was in there in the first place; the fact that I was in that hotel room, across the ocean, across the country, 8 hours but what felt like 8 years away from the wall that she was supposed to hang from away from the man who lended me the cigarette that I glued limply to her mouth so she could come to life away from the dog who never thought she was real I needed someone to blame who was more tangible than the careless baggage handlers and security personnel of an airport too far gone. And she was the one lingering over my shoulder watching me and telling me to give her up, stop trying to piece the bigger parts together stop sobbing uncontrollably stop making everything harder than it had to be. She was so busy scrounging around for a trash bag that she didn’t see how bad it hurt me. She was the one I chose responsible for the final straw; the one that broke me. Turned me into a camel; an ugly metaphor. A bellowing, fisted, autonomous being. Flinging my frustrations around the room. Hoping my body would find a way to hurt itself without me having to tell it to. Wishing I was on the 10th floor, instead of the first, so that I could have an eternity to think of her face, whole again. Think of her face, the whole way. The whole way down. |