EMERGENCY
The deepest being
being a longing to
satisfy a longing for
a solitude of two.
Laurence Joseph
My favorite person is in searing pain,
choked up, the words nine-one-one
refuse to leave my palsied mouth.
The operator keeps asking: “Are you there?”
I finally blurted out a gurgled address.
A zig-zagging ambulance swerves, sirens
blasting like medieval heralds blowing the sound
of gold trumpets and bagpipes that reach
to the stars.
My blurred vision sees scarlet lights flashing.
I think of my beloved’s blood swirling under masked
doctors mauling her insides, her bones as delicate
as a bird’s broken wings.
She already looks like a cadaver with a hoary
visage strapped to a gurney waiting to be tossed
into the fire blazing on the shore of the Ganges.
How to stop shaking, holding back tears listening
to the distant thrum of a mourning song?
Feeling numb and bereft watching a suddenly
shut door on the best part of my life.
I must continue to breathe; she was the air, water
and light that allowed me to thrive. I can’t stop
thinking about the soft curve of her hips, the breasts
and limbs of her body, remembering kisses on her
translucent skin.
Returning home to an empty house awaiting absolute solitude,
I have flashbacks of a ritual of the tenderest of moments.
Opening the door, the bottom falls out of my heart.
Milton P. Ehrlich