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People keep others waiting, for their own reasons. |
When you're waiting for someone, you make friends with the phone cord, wrapping it around your hand and watching it strangle the color from it. When you're waiting, you re-arrange the paper clips and re-position the pillows and fix the pictures on the wall and pass your reflection too many times to keep count, willing yourself not to look. When you're waiting, you play games with yourself, test your self control and your personal boundaries. Waiting games like counting the number of Johnsons in the phone book or recalling each of your childhood toys in order overtake your mind, but can't keep the clock from going any slower, or moving any faster. Blankets are re-folded, socks re-matched, holes re-sewn as an unrepairable one grows larger. When you're waiting for someone, you realize how 10:29 is just a little bit later than yesterday, and how the truth he tells you isn't true. You realize that his shirt's mis-buttoned, that he won't look you in the eye, that he's wearing two socks, but one clearly isn't his. He's got a smudge of something on his neck, and you realize that you don't wear that shade, and that he doesn't notice the half-burned candles amid the cold dinner prepared nearly two hours prior. There aren't excuses of work or friends, no murmurs of extra projects or a night out with the guys as he kicks off his shoes and heads straight to bed, not even bothering to change. You catch the scent that follows, a fruity cloud of deceit blending with the sweat of lies. And then you realize that when you wait for someone, they don't come back. |