Cigarettes and Stars
The
park was exceptionally dark that night. All the street lamps had burnt out over
the course of the past three weeks and now we were forced to walk through the
tangles of jungle gyms and monkey bars in a vast void. Our hands swung freely
by our sides, our left hands with cigarettes bobbing from them.
It
was my first. And the taste was horrible. But it made my lungs ache in a good
way, like I had just ran for a few miles. I watched the smoke on each exhale,
the shape it made as it drifted into the night. He stood there next to me,
close, and flicked the cigarette more than he actually smoked it.
The
two Camel lights had come from the pack I’d bought on my 18th just
because I could. I didn’t know anyone who smoked, and I didn’t plan on
starting. But apparently the cold and the companionship of him changed things.
He’d
been the one to ask. As we were walking out onto Winter street, our hands
sometimes brushing:
“Do
you have a cigarette, by chance?” He looked sad and nervous. The bandages on
his wrists agreed with the look on his face. I nodded and dove my hand into my
bag, grabbing the full pack of Camels. I hated the little camel on the front. I
felt like horrible people had distorted the animal and that somewhere someone
was sticking cigarettes into the mouth of one of these weird lumpy animals. But
I tapped the pack and one little cigarette slipped out, I handed it to him,
grabbed the zippo lighter I had inherited.
He
took it and we paused on the street long enough for him to light it and suck in
a deep breath. He coughed a little- “I didn’t know you smoked.”
“I
don’t.” it was quiet as I said it, only the sound of far-off traffic to back me
up.
“Me
either.” And I believed him. Even as he expertly puffed on the weird thing, I
believed he didn’t smoke. He wasn’t that type, in any context. “Only when I’m
nervous. And they’re usually Marlboros.” He coughed again, it was a quick and
raspy cough, his white bandages gleaming.
He
was nervous. As we stood on the corner, waiting for the little glowing
pedestrian to lure us across the walk. I reached out for his hand. “Please
don’t be nervous.”
And
then I felt stupid for the whole action. His hand, fitting in mine like
watermelon fruit fits into the rind- like it had always been there. It had
grown this way, our hands must have been the same thing at some point in the
cosmic history of things. He looked at me, scared and wide-eyed. It made me
want to cry, his face, too much like a teenage boy, too much like a reject, too
much like a broken soul. I wanted to take off all the gauze and kiss the
stitches and the bloodied skin that had been broken there. But instead I felt
his pulse and he tightened his grip on my hand as we walked. My cigarette had
burnt out, half of the white bit was still there, intact. He had finished his,
and had put it out on a brick wall.
“Why
are you nervous?” I asked, so softly I thought I’d get lucky and he wouldn’t
hear.
But
he looked at me and shyly said, “Only because I’m with you. Because we can be
out and we can do this now. We can walk on the streets and smoke our cigarettes
and talk or not talk. We can look at the stars now and walk through dark swing
sets. You don’t have to go home. I don’t have to go home. We can hold hands. I
could kiss you. We can do anything now. I’m nervous because we can. I’m
trembling with this vast opportunity, and I’m afraid that now, because it’s
here, you won’t like me anymore. And I won’t be able to kiss you and tell you
how to find Orion’s Belt.”
We’d
stopped walking as he told me this, and he started crying. It was subtle, soft
and shy, as he’d been lately. After the accident he had shifted, and sometimes
I couldn’t figure out where he was. But here he was, all of him in front of me,
crying on the sidewalk at two in the morning on a Tuesday in July. The entire
situation seemed bizarre.
But
he was slowly crumpling in on himself, leaning further into the brick wall of a
bank until I thought he would disappear into it. I held his hands and began to
cry. His wrists made me so sad. These skinny things, which I’d seen bleed so
much over the bathtub. I reached out and rubbed at his wet face with the sleeve
of my sweater. He made a sniffling sound and coughed, he was shaking and pale.
I
handed him another cigarette and helped him light it. He shivered and his face
glistened with salt water. We sat down along the wall and he looked up.
“There.” The word fell limp from his dry lips. “Orion’s Belt, look… isn’t it
beautiful up there?” He took my hand and showed me where the constellation lie.
I leaned against his shoulder and told him it was really the most beautiful
night I’d ever seen.
And
it was. It was the most beautiful, but the saddest. Because I had sworn he’d
been put back together. But it was not the case.
He
began to unwind the bandages.
“Juniper,
stop. Please stop.” My words never really came out, I just tried to put the
bandages back on. He was still crying, but he looked at me and was so gentle.
“I
have to see how close I was.”
The
last pad of gauze came off and I wanted to scream because this was how he
wanted it to end. These angry, unclean slashes, so precise I knew he had
planned the exact lines. He nodded, slow. The lines were deep, took so many
tiny stitches to close. There would be scars.
We
sat in a trembling silence- the air around us so still we had to move it
ourselves.
I
reached for another cigarette and finally understood his strangely occasional
smoking habits. I lit the thing and inhaled so deep, wishing it was weed.
Wishing I could get off the ground and fly and make myself a constellation. I
wanted to take him too, I knew he wanted to be up there. The smoke reached up
into the sky and I cried soft and slow because this was not my life.
“I
wish I hadn’t fucked this up.” His voice was raspy and sleepy and cold. He
leaned back and laid down on the empty sidewalk. I laid next to him, curling
into him and hoping I could keep him here.
“You
didn’t… you didn’t fuck this up.” I stuttered and wiped at my eyes. I grabbed
the corner of my sweater and dried his face too, again. It was an oddly
intimate gesture I liked more than holding onto him. It was such a solid
movement. Gentle but all encompassing in its simplicity.
“I’m
still here.”
“You
don’t want to be out there. It’s cold.” So feeble was my answer. How to tell
him I was selfish and had called 911 just to keep him here with me? Of course,
the flashes of his blood against the white porcelain blossomed in my mind, his
ragdoll body next to the shower curtain was an image tattooed inside of me. It
was an ugly, poorly drawn one- but tattoos are forever.
“I
love you. Can we take the bus to my house?”
He
turned to me, on the sidewalk, our hips all awkwardly angling into the
concrete- trying so hard to disappear. “You’re still here. And I’m still here.
It’s scary because now we’re free to do whatever calls to us. But there’s a
starting over. I can feel it, when my wrists throb I know it’s healing. I’m
still sewing back together all of my insides, but I’ll do it.”
I
cried and finished the cigarette, smashing the lit end of it into the cement.
He was still here. I did not have to label him as a shape in the stars, because
he wasn’t there yet. He was going to get up and get on the bus with me. We’d go
back to his house and probably watch old Saturday Night Live reruns. Sometimes
we watched Seinfeld. He still laughed, I didn’t know how, the way he looked to
be hurting.
“We
can have more time. It won’t move if we just lay here, we can’t see it, it
isn’t moving. I feel like we could just lay on this sidewalk for the rest of
whatever our lives are. I feel like I want to kiss you, still. I’m glad I get
to. I’m glad I’m not gone and I’m glad we’re where we are.” He didn’t look at
me, only looked up. Forever starbound were his eyes. I squeezed his hand.
“Please
kiss me.” Maybe I’d kept him alive for this reason. Maybe I had cradled his
head in the crook my arm as he had lost consciousness for this reason. He had
lost too much blood and then he was asleep in my arms, bleeding into the
linoleum. I cried over this, over his scrawny limp body and over what I swore
was lost. Maybe all of that blood was still living in my mind because we were
working for this.
I’d
waited all night in the ER for him. I was supposedly over at Maggie’s, but I
really just sat on the floor of the ER waiting room and cried. My parents never
found out I’d lied.
Nobody
knew what had happened.
I
had found him. I had called them to save him. We didn’t tell anyone. Nobody
knew I was there. Nobody knew he had tried to die.
His
eyes glistened like stars, his whole body burned like it was meant to be cosmic.
And
so he did lean in and there was a moment of eyes closed, teeth hitting as we
curled up on the sidewalk.
We
smoked another cigarette, a shared one, and then we got up, walked to the bus
stop.
The
roll of fluorescence came down the street and we climbed aboard like sailors,
or astronauts, or something important. Sitting in the back we stared at the
street as it passed away from us.
“I
would have missed you too much.” He whispered, touching his wrists.
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