After you left, I put on the Pixies,
lit a cigarette and looked out at the rain
on the slate rooftops of Lazio, grey, riddled
with satellites and slanted, orange cranes,
imagined you ascending, shakily,
into a ring of black clouds and thought
of yesterday’s sky, blue and bare, stretching
over a park of monsters, where we read Jack’s poems
to each other, pausing, roused, while the bronze
hands of Ceres cupped a cobweb like a secret fate,
metal meeting silk, a long-dead sculptor
with a spider’s frown. We made no eye contact all day,
kept staring ahead, as if a film were playing
in the near distance, captivating, and easier
to look at because it had nothing to do with us.
Walking home, dark city, along the river, unsteady in my heels
like a drunk gazelle, I heard you say take my arm.
And in the morning, you went down
the stairs, paused, then said I love you,
and when I didn’t answer, you turned, tall, suited
in a stiff jacket, green-eyed, insisted I say it back,
standing firm, more stern than I have ever heard
you, thrilling, and so I said it, impish, then weak,
and kept saying it at the top of the landing
even after you closed the heavy door
and wound down five flights, unable to stop.
I recovered like the pro that I am.
I had the whole apartment to myself.
I had the whole city, cast for my suffering.
Black cloud. Rain. Smoke. Woody smell.
I caught my flight. I changed this poem.
I rode home.