After an Absence

After an Absence by Linda Pastan

After an Absence
After an absence that was no one’s fault we are shy with each other, and our words seem younger than we are, as if we must return to the time we met and work ourselves back to the present, the way you never read a story from the place you stopped but always start each book all over again. Perhaps we should have stayed tied like mountain climbers by the safe cord of the phone, its dial our own small prayer wheel, our voices less ghostly across the miles, less awkward than they are now. I had forgotten the grey in your curls, that splash of winter over your face, remembering the younger man you used to be. And I feel myself turn old and ordinary, having to think again of food for supper, the animals to be tended, the whole riptide of daily life hidden but perilous pulling both of us under so fast. I have dreamed of our bed as if it were a shore where we would be washed up, not this striped mattress we must cover with sheets. I had forgotten all the old business between us, like mail unanswered so long that silence becomes eloquent, a message of its own. I had even forgotten how married love is a territory more mysterious the more it is explored, like one of those terrains you read about, a garden in the desert where you stoop to drink, never knowing if your mouth will fill with water or sand.

I have dreamed of our bed

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