19 May, 2019
Morning Coffee
Following the curve of the Great Lawn
I turn towards your public bed
The bench with the plaque from the Levy family, remembering loving parents
The wooden frame of the Delacorte Theater throwing a shadow blanket over you
Your college coat, graduated into frayed hope
I sit at your feet, holding two coffees
Heat escaping, pushed by this November morning’s wind
Mingling with your breath while you sleep
I touch your sneaker and call your name
Wait a few seconds as the coffee warms my thigh
You stir, eyes flutter
You see me, moment of almost pure stillness before you reach up your hand
I place a coffee cup inside your grasp, our fingers touch
I blink quickly, cough, ask how you are
You sit up, cup to lip
I can wait for an answer
Still seeing all the versions of you
Beneath the unshaved unwashed face
The “ifs “and “did-I-do-enoughs”
Hanging between us, a torn curtain never to rise
On a play neither could rewrite
Praying I am dead before it closes